Posh (Haganah unit)

POSH (Plugot Sadeh)
פו"ש (פלוגות שדה)
POSH unit in Kfar Bilu
Active1936–1939
Disbanded1939
CountryBritish Mandate of Palestine
BranchHaganah
TypeCommando
RoleAnti-guerilla warfare
Artillery observer
Bomb disposal
Clandestine operation
Close-quarters battle
Counterinsurgency
Crowd control
Desert warfare
Direct action
Force protection
HUMINT
Maneuver warfare
Patrolling
Raiding
Reconnaissance
Riot control
Screening
Security checkpoint
Special operations
Special reconnaissance
Tracking
Urban warfare
Size1,500 fighters (by March 1938)
Part ofHaganah
Garrison/HQVarious locations in Mandatory Palestine
Engagements1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Yitzhak Sadeh
A POSH unit passes through Yasur, Gaza

POSH (Hebrew: פו"ש, also Romanized Fosh, an abbreviation for Plugot Sadeh (Hebrew: פלוגות שדה), lit. Field Companies) was an elite Jewish strike force that served as the commando arm of the Haganah during the 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine when the country was under British Mandate control.[1]

POSH members were hand-picked by Yitzhak Sadeh, commander of the Jewish Settlement Police.

By March 1938, POSH had 1,500 trained fighters divided into 13 regional groups. They were armed with British SMLEs, grenades, rifles and some small arms, and operated in swift commando style raids under Charles Orde Wingate's Special Night Squads (SNS), taking full advantage of their mobility.

POSH was disbanded in 1939 to create a larger force known as the Hish (Heil Sadeh, "Field Corps"). During World War II POSH veterans were trained by the British for commando night raids.


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