Concepts

Special Frontier Force (SFF)

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectPolity

Definition

A covert special-operations paramilitary unit raised in 1962, in the aftermath of the India-China war, for operations along the high-altitude India-China frontier.

Key points

  • It was raised in November 1962 (originally as "Establishment 22") in the wake of the 1962 war with China, drawing heavily on Tibetan refugees and later other recruits.
  • It functions under the Cabinet Secretariat and is associated with the external-intelligence apparatus (the Research and Analysis Wing) rather than the regular MHA chain.
  • It is trained for special operations, mountain and high-altitude warfare, and reconnaissance along the northern borders.
  • It is led by an Inspector General who is an Army officer of Major General rank; it is not part of the regular Army order of battle.
  • It came into wider public discussion during the 2020 stand-off with China in eastern Ladakh.

Why it matters for CAPF

It illustrates the spread of India's special and covert forces beyond the standard CAPFs and is a useful institutions fact for high-altitude border-security questions.

Common confusion

The SFF is a covert special force under the Cabinet Secretariat, distinct from the NSG (counter-terror under the MHA) and from the ITBP (the border-guarding force on the LAC). It is not one of the five CAPFs.

One-line recall

Covert special-operations force raised in 1962 (Establishment 22) under the Cabinet Secretariat, for the high-altitude China frontier.

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Parent note

indo china border and the lac

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