Recruitment and Training
The unit was kept top-secret
during its initial years. Fighters and
commanders were selectively hand-picked, based
on personal acquaintances and family members of
existing members (two of Netanyahu's brothers
also served in the unit, for example).
Since the 1980s, while still
secretive, the unit opened to voluntary
recruits. Twice a year it holds a notoriously
grueling selection camp (Gibush) for
potential recruits lasting several sleepless
days. The recruits are constantly monitored by
doctors and psychologists. Those who make it
through the end with passing evaluation marks
are admitted.
During the 1990s, this
selection camp practice was picked up by other
IDF special forces (Sayeret).
Lately,
IDF Chief of Staff
Dan Halutz plans to unify all these camps to
prevent recruit burn-outs and medical injury by
over-enthusiastic youths.
Once admitted to the unit,
recruits train for 20 months, with heavy
emphasis on small arms, martial arts,
orienteering, camouflage, reconnaissance and
other skills important for survival behind enemy
lines. The training regime consists of the
following:
- Four months basic
infantry training.
- Two months advanced
infantry training.
- Three weeks parachuting
course in the IDF Parachuting School.
- Five weeks counter-terror
(CT) course in the IDF Counter-Terror
Warfare School, followed by more inner-unit
CT training.
- The rest of the training
is dedicated to long-range reconnaissance
patrol training, and especially to
navigation, which is of vast importance in
the unit. While most of the navigation
training is done in pairs, like in every
other unit in the IDF, Sayeret Matkal is one
of handful IDF elite units which conducts
long-range solo navigation exercises.
Although Sayeret Matkal has
its own insignia, it is the only unit in the IDF
whose soldiers are not allowed to wear it in
public due to its classified nature.