The Naval Service Diving Section is a specialist unit of the Irish Naval Service, a branch of the Defence Forces, the military of Ireland. The Naval Service Diving Section specialises in underwater diving tasks for the Naval Service, and since its formation in the early 1960s has become Ireland's most advanced diving team, aiding other state agencies in various specialist roles.
The Diving Section was officially established in 1964 when Commodore Joe Deasy brought back skills he learned from the British Royal Navy to the Irish Naval Service. During the mid-1980s, the diver training course was set up at HaulbowlineNaval Base, Cork Harbour, and since then over 1,400 Naval Service men and women have applied to join the elite unit, with just 150 succeeding, all men. Each year around 50 Naval Service personnel apply to join the unit, roughly 15 of these are selected for the 11-week Naval Diving Course and on average just 5 complete it. The course is conducted during the winter months to prepare divers for the harshest conditions. Each diver needs to undertake 17 separate training courses to stay current on the section's equipment. The NSDS operates a 24-hour on-call capability, ready to respond rapidly to any tasking around the state. The NSDS is the only International Diving Schools Association accredited diving school in Ireland. The Naval Service Diving Section provides specialised training and certification for the special operations unit of the Irish Defence Forces, responsible for the provision of air and combat diving technique training for the Army Ranger WingCombat Diving Section. The NSDS conducts EOD and explosive ordnance reconnaissance training alongside diving units of the Royal Navy and Royal Canadian Navy.
Domestic operations
In 1973, the NSDS was involved in its first high-profile operation during the interception of the Claudia, a vessel importing arms for the Provisional IRA. In 1979, the section was tasked to assist during the Whiddy Island disaster, in which the oil tankerBetelgeuse exploded in Bantry Bay claiming the lives of 50 people. In 1985, they were was tasked with the search and recovery operation of Air India Flight 182, which came down off the south-west Irish coast in the deadliest terrorist bombing in aviation history, resulting in the deaths of 329 people. Two of the divers involved in that operation were awarded Distinguished Service Medals.
Overseas operations
NSDS teams have been involved in "Operation PONTUS" from 2015 onward, aboard Irish Naval Service vessels in the Mediterranean Sea as part of the European Union's humanitarian response to the European migrant crisis.