
Basque style Beret

Black beret with military emblem
A 'beret' (
pronounced in
English, except in
North America where it is pronounced ) is a soft round
cap, usually of wool
felt, with a flat crown, which is worn by both men and women.
Berets are worn by many military and police units, and in some countries are particularly associated with elite units, who often wear berets in more unusual colours (such as the
maroon of
Commonwealth parachute troops, the
green of the
Royal Marines Commandos,
French Commandos (''Bérets verts''), and
United States Army Special Forces (Green Berets), the scarlet of the elite Soviet Internal Troops (
Spetsnaz) and Police Tactical Unit of Singapore, the
beige or tan of
Commonwealth special forces units (
SAS,
CSOR) and
U.S. Army Rangers, or the wide black of French
Chasseurs alpins, the first military unit to have worn berets).
Reportedly, the first beret was seen in
Ancient Crete in 1750 BC.
Wearing the beret
The beret when properly worn fits snugly around the head, and the soft crown can be shaped in a variety of ways – it is commonly pushed to one side. Berets were originally worn by
Northern Basque peasants (from the border area of Southern France, and Northern Spain) and were knitted from
wool. Today berets are normally made from wool
felt or
acrylic fibre.
Uniform berets feature a headband or sweatband attached to the wool, made either from leather or silk, sometimes with a drawstring allowing the wearer to tighten the hat. The drawstrings are, according to custom, either tied and cut off/tucked in or else left to dangle. The beret is often adorned with a
cap badge, either in cloth or metal. Some berets have a piece of buckram or other stiffener in the position where the badge is intended to be worn. Berets are also often lined with silk, imitation silk, or other material, though in some militaries the liner is removed in order to shape (called "forming") the beret.
The headband is in most cases apparent, but it can also be folded in (Basque style beret).
Berets in the military
Berets have been a component of the uniforms of many armed forces throughout the world since the mid-20th century. A light blue beret is the international symbol of the
United Nations Peacekeeping forces. Military berets are usually pulled to the right, but the armies of some European countries (including France) have influenced the pull to the left.
The use of berets as a military headdress dates back to the creation of the French
Chasseurs alpins in the early 1880s. These mountain troops were issued with a new style of uniform which included several features which were very practical and advanced by the standards of the time, notably the large and floppy blue beret which they still retain (see below). This was so unfamilar a fashion outside France that it had to be described in an English encyclopedia in 1911 as ''"a sort of
tam o'shanter hat".
[1]
Berets have features that make them very attractive to the military: They are cheap and easy to make in large numbers, they can be manufactured in a wide range of colours to enhance branch or regimental esprit de corps, they can be rolled up and stuffed into a pocket without damage and they can be worn with headphones (this is one of the reasons why tank crews came to adopt the beret). However, they are not so useful in field conditions for an infantryman, as they do not offer the protection for the face against sun and rain that a peaked or wide brimmed hat does.
The beret was found particularly useful as a uniform for armoured vehicle crewmen, and the
British Tank Corps (later Royal Tank Corps) adopted the headdress as early as 1918. German AFV crews in the late 1930s also adopted a beret with the addition of a padded crash helmet inside. The colour black became popular as a tank crew headdress since it did not show oil stains picked up inside the interior of a vehicle. Black berets continue to be worn by armoured regiments throughout the
Commonwealth.
Berets have become the default military headdress of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, just as the
tricorne,
shako,
kepi and
peaked cap were in various early eras. The beret is now worn by the majority of military personnel across the world. The three major hold-outs were the United States, Russia, and China (PRC) - all have now followed the example of the other armies in adopting berets.
Argentina
Berets are worn by some units in the
Argentine Armed Forces, with distinctive colours for some units or functions. The beret colours are as follows:
★ Dark green —
601 Commando Company,
602 Commando Company
★ Black —
Armoured Troops,
Mechanized Infantry, Marine Infantry
★ Red —
Paratroopers
★ Claret —
601 Air Assault Regiment
★ Tan —
Mountain Troops (''
Cazadores de Montaña'')
★ Camouflage —
Jungle Troops (''
Cazadores del Monte'')
★ Dark blue — Argentine Army Aviation,
Special Operations Group (GOE)
★ Green and camouflage — All other Army units
Australia

An Australian Special Air Service Regiment beret.
Berets are worn by all corps in the
Australian Army, with distinctive colours for some units:
[2]
★ Black —
Royal Australian Armoured Corps
★ Fawn —
Special Air Service Regiment
★ Light blue —
Australian Army Aviation
★ Scarlet —
Royal Australian Corps of Military Police
★ Dull cherry — Parachute units
★ Rifle green —
Royal Australian Regiment
★ Sherwood green — Commando
★ Slate grey —
Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps
★ Dark blue — other personnel
Black berets are worn in the
Royal Australian Navy, and blue berets in the
Royal Australian Air Force, but only by qualified Airfield Defence Guards and Ground Defence Officers. Terracotta berets are worn by Multi-National Force and Observer contingents. In all cases, the beret is pulled to the right and a badge worn above the left eye.
Austria

Austrian green beret.
Berets are common in most parts of the
Army, and are usually worn for special occasions, but also regularly by certain forces.
★ Green — infantry, all troops that do not wear another colour
★ Olive-green —
Jagdkommandos
★ Black — mechanized troops, anti-tank troops, artillery, reconnaissance
★ Dark red — Jägerbataillon 25
★ Scarlet red — guard of honour
Belgium
Berets have been worn by
Belgian military personnel since World War II. Berets vary in colour according to the regiment, and carry a crest pin (sometimes on a coloured background patch) which is of gold colour for officers, silver for noncommissioned officers and bronze for troops.
★
Maroon —
Paracommando Brigade HQ/1 Para/3 Para/Special Forces Group/Parachute Training Center
★ Green —
2 Commando/Paracommando Brigade Field Artillery/Commando Training Center
★ Green (bigger size, basque type with folded-in brim, with boar's head pin) — Chasseurs Ardennais regiment
★ Brown — Infantry
★ Black — Engineers and Armoured troops
★ Dark blue — Artillery
★ Cobalt blue — Logistics and administration troops
★ Grey — Transmission troops
★ Bright red —
Military police
★ Grey-blue —
Air component
★ Light blue — former Land component Light aviation (now part of Air Component)
★ Dark navy blue (no crest pin, but embroidered crest) —
Navy component
★ Dark green — Medical component
Bulgaria
Berets have been worn by
Bulgarian military personnel since 1991. Berets vary in colour according to the military branch, and carry a crest pin (sometimes on a coloured background patch) resembling the unit's insignia.
★ Red —
Army
★ Light blue —
Air Force
★ Black or white —
Navy
★ Black —
Gendarmerie
★ Dark navy blue —
Naval Specialized Research and Analysis Division
Canada
Berets were first worn in the
Canadian Army in 1937 when tank regiments (at that time part of the infantry) adopted the black beret of the
Royal Armoured Corps. The black beret, which is now the headdress of the
Royal Canadian Armoured Corps (RCAC), was first worn by the Essex Regiment (Tank), now renamed The Windsor Regiment (RCAC). This was because the other new tank units were ordered to wear the headdress that they had while serving as infantry. The Essex Regiment (Tank) was a new unit, formed as a tank regiment, with no connection to the Infantry. As such, it picked the headdress that was worn by the Royal Tank Corps of the
British Army.
[3]
During the Second World War, a khaki beret was adopted throughout the
Canadian Army, with the Canadian Armoured Corps (later Royal Canadian Armoured Corps) wearing the black beret and parachute troops wearing the
maroon beret adopted by British airborne forces. The 2nd Canadian Parachute Battalion (the Canadian component of the
First Special Service Force) wore a red beret with the dress uniform. Wartime berets were much fuller in cut than postwar berets.

Midnight Blue Beret with coloured flash, worn by a soldier of the Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps in 1954.
After the Second World War, a series of coloured berets were adopted, with infantry regiments wearing scarlet, rifle regiments wearing dark (rifle) green, the armoured corps wearing black, and other arms and services wearing midnight blue berets, with a large coloured "flash" in corps colours - dull cherry for the
Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps, Emerald Green for the
Royal Canadian Dental Corps, etc. The coloured flashes were not popular and replaced in 1956 with forage caps bearing coloured bands in corps colours. The midnight blue beret itself was retained, however.
[4]
When the Canadian Forces unified in the late 1960s, the rifle green beret was adopted as the CF standard. The
RCAC successfully fought to retain its distinctive black beret, and the
Canadian Airborne Regiment wore the
maroon beret until the unit was disbanded. Scottish and Irish infantry regiments wear
tam o'shanters,
glengarries,
balmorals or
caubeens instead of berets. The berets listed below are the current standard:
★
Maroon — Paratroopers
★ Black — Armoured Corps Units,
Canadian Navy
★ Scarlet —
Military Police
★ CF green (also known as "
rifle green") — other army units
★ Air force blue —
Canadian Air Force
★ Blaze orange —
Search and Rescue technicians
★
Tan — Special Forces units.
The beret is used with service dress as formal headdress (especially after the move away from the
forage cap in the 1990s) as well as with
CADPAT clothing as garrison dress and as a form of combat dress. In certain cases the beret is even used as Ceremonial Dress, most commonly in units of the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps.
China, People's Republic of
Since
May 5,
2000, the
People's Liberation Army has adopted woolen berets for all its personnel,
[5] along with the traditional
peaked caps.
★ Dark greenish brown — Infantry
★ Dark blue — Navy
★ Dark sky-blue — Air Force
Croatia
In the
Croatian army berets are used in special forces and professional brigades.
Image
Croatian presidental guard
Joint staff:
★ Green with golden cap badge- Joint staff
★ Red - presidential guard on their
battledress uniforms
★ Green - Special operations battalion
★ Black - Military police
Guard brigades:
★ Black -
1st Guard Brigade "Tigers"
★ Green - 2nd Guard Brigade "Thunders"
★ Grey - 3rd Guard Brigade "Martens"
★ Red - 4th Guard Brigade "Spiders"
Czech Republic
The
Armed Forces of the Czech Republic use berets for both
battledress and display uniform. The colour of the beret is defined by the branch of the armed forces. The beret displays the small state coat of arms and the badge of rank of the individual.
[6]
★ Orange — Civil defence troops, Engineering Brigades
★
Maroon —
4th Rapid Deployment Brigade (Airborne), 601st Special Forces Group
★ Dark green — Reconnaissance troops
★ Light green — Other ground forces (mechanised infantry, armour, artillery, NBC protection, etc.)
★ Dark blue —
Air Force
★ Grey — Logistics, Medical troops
★ Black — Military Police
Denmark
The
Royal Danish Army uses berets for all its personnel. The Navy and Air Force also use berets.
★ Green — Support troops; artillery; engineers; home guard
★ Red — Military police
★ Burgundy — ''
Jægerkorpset'' (
special forces)
★ Black — Combat troops (armour and infantry)
★ Dark blue —
Royal Danish Navy;
Royal Danish Marines
★ Light Blue Gray —
Royal Danish Air Force
★ Light blue - Army Aviation [Air Force]
Ecuador
Berets are worn by all personnel of the
Ecuadorian Army (''Fuerza Terrestre''), with distinctive colours for some units or functions. The beret colours are:
★ Black — Military Police
★ Red — Paratroopers and Special Operations Forces
★ Dark blue — Army Aviation (''Aviación del Ejército'')
★ Dark green — all other Army units
★ Gray — for use with the dress uniform (''4-A'') for those forces using the dark green beret
★ Camouflage — IWIA (''indigenous tribal members unit'') forces
Finland
The Finnish Defence Force uses berets with cap badges for the
Army,
Navy and the
Air Force. The berets are worn in "clean" garrison duties such as roll calls and with the walking-out uniform, but not with the battle dress. Until the mid-1990s, the beret was reserved for troops with special status, such as the coastal
jägers and the parachute jägers, but is nowadays used by all units. In the winter, berets are replaced by winter headgear.
Berets are also used by the
Finnish Frontier Guard, which is a military organization under the aegis of Ministry of Interior during peacetime.
★ Olive-green (Badge: silver lion's head) — Army
★ Olive-green (Badge: golden lion's head with a crown) — Finnish Rapid Deployment Force and units abroad
★ Blue (Badge: Air Force insignia) — Air Force
★ Blue (Badge: silver
griffin) — Army aviation
★ Blue (Badge: Harp and sword) — Military bands
★ Dark blue (Badge: Anchor and Lion) — Navy (including coastal troops, but with the exception of coastal jägers)
★ Black (Badge: Armored head) — Armoured Brigade
★ Green (Badge: Golden sea eagle's head) — Coastal jägers
★ Maroon (Badge: Arrow and parachute) — Parachute jägers or special jägers (Utti Jäger Regiment)
★ Olive-green (Badge: Golden bear's head, sword and fir tree twig) — Frontier jägers
France
The military beret originated in the
French Army, in the form of the wide and floppy headdress worn by the
Chasseurs alpins (mountain light infantry) from their foundation in the early 1880s. A tight-fitting version was subsequently adopted by French armoured troops towards the end of World War I. Between the wars special fortress units raised to garrison the
Maginot Line wore khaki berets as did the 13th DBLE of the
French Foreign Legion when it was created in 1940. The beret in red, blue or green was a distinction of the Metropolitan, Colonial and
Foreign Legion paratroop regiments during the
Indochina and
Algerian wars. After 1962 the beret in either khaki or the colours specified above became the standard French Army headdress for ordinary use.
With the exception of the
Naval Commandos whose beret emulates the
British Commando beret and is worn pulled to the right with the badge worn over the left ear, all French berets are pulled to the left with the badge worn on the right side over the eye or the temple.
★ Wide black — ''
Chasseurs alpins'' and other mountain troops (the wide beret's nickname is the ''tarte'' (tart))
★ Green —
Naval Commandos;
Foreign Legion
★ Dark blue —
Air Commandos; ''
Troupes de Marine''
★ Red(scarlet) —
Paratroops (except the Foreign Legion) (this colour is called ''amarante'')
★ Electric blue —
Army Light Aviation
★ Black — all other army troops
Germany
The German ''
Heer'' uses berets with cap badges for every branch of service. The ''
Luftwaffe'' and the
Navy issue navy blue berets only to their ground or land combat units (called ''Luftwaffen-'' and ''Marine-Sicherungsstaffeln''). Berets are usually worn at special ceremonies and roll calls, although units with a special ''esprit de corps'', especially armoured and mechanized infantry (''Panzergrenadiere'') battalions, wear their berets all the time.

First Sergeant of the Panzerjäger with black beret 1989
★ Black — armoured units, including armoured reconnaissance and the now disbanded ''
Panzerjäger'' (anti-tank)
★ Dark red — special units, including airborne troops, army aviation, division airmobile operations (DLO; ''Division Luftbewegliche Operationen''), and Division Special Operations (DSO; ''Division Spezielle Operationen''), including the
KSK (''Kommando Spezialkräfte'')
★ Light red — support units, including artillery, engineers, intelligence,
psychological operations (''Operative Information''), anti-aircraft, supply, NBC protection, signals, electronic warfare, transport, topography, and military police (''
Feldjäger'')
★ Moss green — infantry units, including ''Jägertruppe'', ''
Panzergrenadiere'' (armoured infantry), and ceremonial guards (''Wachbataillon des Heeres''); military bands
★ Dark blue — medical units
★ Navy blue — ''
Luftwaffe'' (Air Force) and ''
Deutsche Marine'' (Navy) infantry and ceremonial guards; multinational units (e.g.
Eurocorps)
Greece
The beret colours worn by the
Hellenic Army are as follows:
★ Dark blue — Marine Corps
★ Light blue — Presidential Guard
★ Black — Armoured Corps
★ Green — Special Forces (including Airborne Troops)
★ Dark red — Army Aviation
Hungary
Berets currently in Hungarian military:
★ Black - Armored Units
★ Crimson - Military Police
★ Green - Paratroopers
★ Scarlet - Artillery
Iceland
Icelandic armed services commonly use berets.
★ Blue —
Icelandic Crisis Response Unit
★ Black —
Icelandic Coast Guard
India
The beret is the standard headgear for the
Indian Army. Berets are worn by officers and
other ranks, apart from
Sikhs, who wear
turbans. The beret colours worn by the Indian Army are as follows:
★ Green — Infantry regiments (except light infantry and rifles)
★ Dark (rifle) green —
Light infantry and rifle regiments
★ Maroon —
The Parachute Regiment and
Special Forces
★ Black — Armoured Corps
★ Grey — Army Aviation Corps
★ Scarlet — Corps of Military Police
★ Navy blue — Other corps and regiments
Indonesia
The beret is the headgear of ground forces and military police in the
Indonesian Armed Forces.
★ Red -
Special Forces
★ Green - Infantry
★ Black - Cavalry
★ Moss Green - Artillery
★ Steel Gray - Combat Engineers
★ Aquamarine - Army Military Police
★ Purple -
Marine Corps
★ Light Blue - Naval Military Police
★ Orange - Air Force's Special Troops
★ Dark Blue - Air Force Military Police
Ireland
The beret colours worn by ''Óglaigh na hÉireann'' (
Irish Defence Forces) are as follows:
★ Black with red patch behind capbadge — Permanent Defence Forces
★ Light green with bottle green patch — Reserve Defence Forces
★ Bottle green —
Army Ranger Wing (Sciathán Fianóglach an Airm)
★ Red — ''An Cor Póilíní Airm'' (Military Police)
All personnel wear a common capbadge, a sunburst insignia with the letters "FF" inscribed above the left eye of the beret; this is the ancient symbol of the
Fianna, the elite forces of Irish warriors.
Israel
Main articles: Israel Defense Forces insignia
Israeli Defense Forces soldiers wear berets only on formal occasions, such as ceremonies and roll calls, and in disciplinary situations such as courts martial and imprisonments. The beret is placed beneath the left
epaulette The beret colors are as follows:
★ Olive green —
general corps, recruits, general logistic corps
★ Black —
armored corps
★ Turquoise —
artillery corps
★ Maroon —
Paratroopers Brigade, general staff units (
Sayeret Matkal and others)
★ Light green (lime) —
Nahal Brigade
★ Purple —
Givati Brigade
★ Brown —
Golani Brigade
★ Camouflage —
Kfir Brigade
★ Deep green —
Intelligence Directorate, field intelligence corps,
border police
★ Orange —
Home Front Command
★ Silver —
engineering corps
★ Blue —
military police
★ Deep blue —
navy
★ Gray —
air force
Italy
Italian Army personnel used to wear a
garrison cap alongside the combination cap, until the early 1970s when the garrison cap was replaced by the beret. Until the early 1980s the general Army colour for the beret was khaki, the black being reserved to armoured units. The colours presently used are:
★ Maroon — Paratroopers
★ Blue — Army aviation
★ Black — all Army units, except the above-mentioned ones
★ Green — Navy (
Comsubin) and Army Special Forces (
Incursori)
★ Teal blue — Air Force guards
★ Red —
Carabinieri Hunters and
Tuscania Squadron (Military Police Special Raid Units)
★ Dark green —
GICO and other specialized units in
Guardia di Finanza
Malaysia
Berets are worn by some units of the
Malaysian Armed Forces. The colours presently used are:
★ Maroon —
Army 10 Paratroop Brigade
★ Green — Army Special Forces (''
Grup Gerak Khas'')
★ Dark green —
Royal Malay Regiment
★ Light blue —
Air Force elite ''Paskau'' (Special Air Team) and regular aviation
★ Dark blue —
Royal Malaysian Navy
★ Pink —
Naval elite ''Paskal'' troops
Mexico
In the
Mexican Army, the beret is worn by:
★ Maroon — Paratroopers
★ Black — Special Forces Units (GAFEs)
In the
Mexican Navy:
★ Black — Paratroopers
Netherlands
When the
Royal Netherlands Armed Forces acquired new modernised uniforms (designed by the Dutch couturier
Frans Molenaar) in 2001, the berets changed as well. Since 2004, soldiers of the
Royal Netherlands Army have worn a petrol (blue-green) beret, whereas previously they wore brown.
The following colours are also used (before and after the modernisation):
★ Black — Armour and Cavalry
★ Green — Commandos of the ''
Korps Commandotroepen''
★ Red — Airmobile troops of the Air Manoeuvre Brigade (one third of the brigade is on jump status)
★ Grey-blue —
Royal Netherlands Air Force
★ Dark blue (near black) —
Royal Netherlands Navy
★ Black —
Royal Netherlands Marine Corps (wear a red patch behind the beret-flash)
★ Bright blue — ''
Koninklijke Marechaussee'' (Royal Gendarmerie)
The only Dutch military units that do not wear a beret are the ''Gele Rijders'' (Horse Artillery), who wear a blue garrison cap with yellow trimming.
All regiments and services have their own distinctive colours. There are quite a lot, but the number of colours in the logistic services was reduced in 2001. This colour is shown in a patch of cloth behind the beret flash. The intendance (maroon), transport troops (blue), military administration (pink; hence the nickname 'Pink Mafia'), technical service (black), and medical troops and service (green) lost their colours and all now wear yellow patches.
★ Infantry — Red, except:
★
★ Grenadier Guards — Red with blue border
★
★ Rifle Guards — Green with yellow border
★
★ Fusilier Guards — Orange with blue border
★
★ Regiment van Heutsz — Black with orange border
★
★ Limburg Rifles Regiment — Green with maroon border
★ Korps Commandotroepen — Black with dark green border
★ Cavalry (Armour) — Blue with white, red or orange border
★ Cavalry (Reconnaissance) — Blue with black border
★ Artillery — Black with red border
★ Engineers — Brown
★ Signals — Blue with white border
★ Logistics — Yellow
★ Legal Affairs — Black with white border
★ Psychological and Sociological Service — Red
★ Protestant Chaplains — Black
★ Catholic Chaplains — Blue
★ Jewish Chaplains — Black
★ Humanist Society Chaplains — Bright green
★ Hindu Chaplains — Bright blue
★ Troops in Initial Training — Red
★ Royal Military Academy Cadets — Red with yellow border
★ Physical Training Instructors — Blue
★ Technical Staff — Maroon
New Zealand
All soldiers in the
New Zealand Army wear rifle green berets, except for
Special Air Service, who wear a sand or ERCW colour. Personnel of the
Royal New Zealand Air Force wear dark blue, while the
Royal New Zealand Navy wear black.
Norway

Norwegian soldier wearing an olive green beret
The Norwegian armed forces use the beret as a garrison cap, but some units (mostly armored vehicle personnel) also use it in the field. The Norwegian beret and all other headwear except those of the
Navy always have the current king's cipher as a badge; currently this is a numeral ''5'' inside an ''H'', for
"Harald V". The navy has a crowned gold anchor for their enlisted personnel, a crowned gold anchor surrounded by a circle of rope for their petty officers, and a crowned golden anchor surrounded by leaved branches for officers. The colours used are:
★ Bright blue —
6th Division (except armoured troops, mechanised infantry and military police)
★ Dark green — all army forces located in
Finnmark
★ Black — Armour; Intelligence
★ Khaki —
2nd Battalion
★ Emerald green —
Telemark Battalion
★ Maroon —
Army Ranger Command
★ Red —
Military police
★ Olive green — other army units
★ Olive green with silver badge — recruits in
His Majesty's The Kings Guards;
Krigsskolen
★ Dark blue —
Royal Norwegian Navy
★ Air force blue —
Royal Norwegian Air Force Base Defence Units
★ Air force light blue —
Royal Norwegian Air Force Air Defence Artillery Units
The special operations units of the Navy wear the same berets as the rest of the navy. However they have a coloured patch behind the cap badge, the colour of which determines the unit:
★ Blue —
Minedykkerkommandoen
★ Red —
Kystjegerkommandoen
★ Green —
Marinejegerkommandoen
Pakistan
★ Rifle green —
Frontier Force Regiment
★ Green with red plume —
Punjab Regiment
★ Maroon —
Baloch Regiment
★ Red with plume —
Sindh Regiment
★ Green with red patch behind badge —
Azad Kashmir Regiment
★ Green with feather —
Northern Light Infantry
★ Black — Armour
★ Dark blue — Artillery
★ Maroon-red — Air Defence
★ Blue — Engineers
★ Red — Medical Corps
Poland
Black berets were introduced before
World War II for tank and armoured car crews. During World War II, berets were widely adopted in the
Polish Army on the
Western Front. After the war in the communist era, berets were worn only by armoured units (black), navy for field and work uniform (black), paratroopers (maroon), and marines (light blue). After 1990, the beret became the standard headgear in the Armed Forces of Republic of Poland. The following colours are in use:
★ Light Blue — Marines
★ Black — Armoured troops,
Navy (for field and work uniform)
★ Brown — Territorial Defence
★ Green —
Army general use
★ Maroon — Airborne troops and Special Operations
★ Scarlet — Military Police (Gendarmerie)
★ Steel grey —
Air force
★ Grey —
Operational Mobile Reaction Group (GROM)
The black beret is also the distinctive headgear of World War II veterans, particularly
Armia Krajowa veterans.
Portugal
In the
Portuguese Armed Forces, the following berets are in use:
★ Emerald green —
Paratroopers
★ Brown —
Army general use
★ Black — Cavalry (except Cavalry Paratroopers), including Military Police
★ Red —
Comandos
★ Grass green —
Special Operations Forces
★ Navy blue —
Marines
★ Sky blue —
Air Force Police
★ Black (or dark blue) with a green strip on the lower half —
Republican National Guard (GNR) Infantry Regiment Operational Battalion (public order and special operations units)
Until 1975, the following berets were also in use:
★ Yellow — Mozambique Special Groups
★ Maroon — Mozambique Parachutists Special Groups
★ Camouflage — Angola and Mozambique "Flechas" (covert operations special forces) and Guinea 3rd Commando Company
★ Black - Angola and Mozambique Volunteer Civil Defense Organizations
★ White - Mozambique Air Volunteer Formations
Russia/USSR

Russian paratroopers wearing the blue beret.
Russian military structures (both Armed Forces and
Internal Troops) use the following types of berets:
★ Sky blue — Airborne troops (
VDV)
★ Black —
Marines
★ Dark green — Special Units of FSB Border Troops
★ Rust red — Special Units of
Interior Ministry Troops (
MVD)
★ Orange —
Search and Rescue and Emergency Ministry troops (EMERCOM)
★ Cornflower blue — Federal Protection Service (FSO)
★ Camouflage — non-regulation, but often seen at the
Red Square parades
Serbia
The
Serbian Armed Forces wear berets in the following colours:
★ Green —
Army
★ Black —
Military Police
★ Maroon —
63rd Paratroop Brigade and some other special forces
★ Steel blue —
Air Force
★ Navy blue —
Navy
Singapore
The
Singapore Armed Forces adopts the beret as their standard headgear. The different color divisions are as follows:
★ Green —
infantry
★ Black — armour
★ Khaki —
guards
★ Red — commandos
★ Dark Blue — support and artillery & navy
★ Air force blue —
Air Force (contrary to its name, the beret is closer to green in color)
The berets are all adorned with the Singapore Armed Forces coat of arms, with the exception of the Air Force beret and navy beret which are adorned with their respective cap-badge. Officers in the navy have a different cap-badge from the enlisted men.
South Africa
The
South African Army wears the beret as its standard headgear. The different color divisions are as follows:
★ Green —
infantry
★ Black —
armour
★ Orange — Military Police
★ Maroon —
44 Parachute Regiment,
Special Forces, Military Health Services
★ Dark blue — Artillery, Combat Engineers
★ Light blue — Administrative Services Corps
★ Light brown — Personnel
★ Camouflage - Special Forces (
South African 32 Battalion)
The berets are all adorned with the unit's insignia. Some of the traditional units wear other headgear - for example, the
Cape Town Highlanders Regiment and the
South African Military Health Service.
South Korea
Berets are mostly limited to the elite units of the
South Korean Military, including:
★ Black —
Army Special Warfare Command (adorned with the Airborne badge),
Reserve Officer Training Corps,
KATUSA (Korean Augmentation to the United States Army)
★ Red —
Air Force Combat Control Team (CCT)
★ Maroon — Air Force Special Air Rescue Team (SART)
★ Green —
Marine Corps Force Reconnaissance
★ Camouflage —
Navy UDT/SEAL Team and
armor
Other than these units, several secret commando units (mostly disbanded in the mid-1990s) formed to infiltrate
North Korea during the
Cold War days wore black berets and adorned them with the badges of individual units. Korean liaison soldiers serving in the
U.S. Eighth Army (KATUSA) have also been wearing black berets along with American uniforms since that beret became a standard headgear of the U.S. Army in 2001.
As of 2006, there have been several proposals within the Korean Ministry of Defense to replace the current field cap with a dark-coloured beret as the standard army headgear.
South Vietnam (defunct)
★ Red — paratroopers, Rangers
★ Green — marines,
LLDB
★ Brown — rangers
★ Black or Green — special forces
★ Black — palace guards
★
Tan — political officers
Sri Lanka
Only the elite forces wear berets in the
Sri Lanka Armed Forces.
★ Red —
Army Commando Regiment
★ Black —
Army Special Forces Regiment,
Navy Special Boat Squadron,
Air Force Regiment Special Force
Sweden
The beret is used in the various
armed forces of
Sweden. The colours used are:
★ Black (earlier dark blue) — armoured/mechanised units; Life Guard
★ Maroon — paratroopers
★ Bright red — musicians
★ Dark green — Cavalry, which includes the army ranger battalion, the ISTAR-unit, Airmobile battalion, military police and the ceremonial guard.
★ Green — amphibious troops and coastal rangers
★ Dark blue — all other units and for units serving abroad. Was also worn by troops in the coastal artillery prior to 2001
★ Blue — Helicopter Flotillia (helicopters)
★ Brown —
home guard
Switzerland
The beret is worn by all
Swiss armed services, as well as various cantonal police forces and customs.
★ Green — infantry
★ Red — artillery
★ Dark red — rescue troops
★ Black — armoured and mechanised units; signals and headquarters troops
★ Claret — mechanics; logistics troops; maintenance troops; territorial troops
★ Grey — "Military Security": military police, fortification maintenance personnel, NBC specialists, special military security (''Festungswachkorps'')
★ Deep blue —
Air Force (including paratroopers)
★ Light blue — medical and veterinary personnel
★ Yellow — military observers on
OSCE missions
Thailand

2nd grade Army Reserve Force Students wear khaki green beret with army reserve force insignia
The beret is used in the various armed forces of
Thailand. The colours used are:
★ Maroon — Paratroops, Special Forces
★ Khaki green —
Army Reserve Force Students
★ Black — all other
Army units,
Air Force,
Thahan Phran, Paratroop Police, Border Patrol Police
★ Camouflage —
Royal Thai Marine Corps
The black beret is also worn by ordinary police in certain situations.
Turkey
★ Black — Armored vehicle personnel
★ Green — Gendarmerie
★ Light blue — Commandos
★ Maroon — Special forces
United Kingdom
The
British Army beret dates back to 1918 when the
French 70th
Chasseurs alpins were training with the British
Tank Corps. The Chasseurs alpins wore a distinctive large beret (see above) and Major-General Sir
Hugh Elles, the TC's Colonel, realised this style of headdress would be a practical option for his
tank crews, forced to work in a reduced space. He thought, however, that the Chasseur beret was "too sloppy" and the
Basque-style beret of the French tank crews was "too skimpy", so a compromise based on the Scottish
tam o'shanter was designed and submitted for the approval of
George V in November 1923. It was adopted in March 1924.
During the Second World War the beret was also adopted by the
Commandos and
Parachute Regiment. Later in the war, a rather baggier beret-like hat, called a General Service Cap, was issued to all ranks of the British Army (with RAC, parachute, commando, Scottish and Irish units excepted), to replace the earlier Field Service Cap. The GS Cap was not popular, and after the war was replaced with a true beret.
[7]
Today, every British military unit wears a beret, with the exception of the
Royal Regiment of Scotland and
Royal Irish Regiment, who wear the
tam o'shanter and the
caubeen respectively (the
Scots Guards and
Irish Guards, however, wear berets, as frequently do the Royal Irish Regiment on operations). Many of these berets are in distinctive colours and all are worn with the
cap badge of the service,
regiment or
corps. The cap badge for all services in the UK is supposed to be worn directly over the left eye.
Beret Colours
The colours are as follows:
★ Khaki —
Foot Guards,
Honourable Artillery Company,
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment,
Royal Anglian Regiment,
Duke of Lancaster's Regiment,
Royal Welsh,
Yorkshire Regiment
★ Light grey —
Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
★ Dark grey —
Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps
★ Brown —
King's Royal Hussars,
Royal Wessex Yeomanry
★ Black —
Royal Tank Regiment,
W (Westminster Dragoons) Squadron, Royal Yeomanry
★ Dark (Rifle) green —
The Rifles,
Royal Gurkha Rifles,
Small Arms School Corps,
Essex Yeomanry
★
Maroon —
Parachute Regiment, All ranks serving with
16 Air Assault Brigade other than the non Parachute Regiment Infantry Battalion(note that the beret is not restricted to Parachute qualified personnel).
★ Beige —
Special Air Service including attached troops who are not SAS-qualified
★ Lovat Green -
Special Reconnaissance Regiment
★ Sky blue —
Army Air Corps
★ Cypress green —
Intelligence Corps
★ Scarlet —
Royal Military Police
★ Green —
Adjutant General's Corps (except Royal Military Police, who wear scarlet, and
Military Provost Staff, who wear navy blue),
Military Provost Guard Service
★ Navy blue — all other
Army units (except Scottish and Irish line infantry regiments),
Royal Navy,
Royal Marines who are not commando-qualified
★
Commando green —
commando-qualified
Royal Marines, Commando qualified personnel of all services serving in
Commando units,
Special Boat Service
★ RAF blue grey —
Royal Air Force (including
RAF Regiment)
[8]
Other Adornments
Some Regiments and Coorps wear a coloured backing behind the capbadge, these include:
★
Foot Guards - Blue Red Blue patch
★
Honourable Artillery Company - Black Circle
★
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment - Primrose and Blue Patch
★
Royal Anglian Regiment - Small Black 'Tombstone'
★
Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps — Red Patch
★
Royal Army Medical Corps - Cherry Patch
★
Army Air Corps - Black Patch
★
Army Physical Training Corps - Patch in Corps Colours
★
Royal Marines 'Red Tombstone' (only on blue beret worn by those who are not commando-qualified)
The
Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, the only remaining independent fusilier regiment, wears a feather
hackle on the beret. Other ranks of the
Royal Welsh also wear hackles.
Members of the Royal Tank Regiment, Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, Army Air Corps, Parachute Regiment, SAS and Intelligence Corps wear berets in Nos 1, 2, 3 and 6,
Dress. Other Regiments and Corps wear
peaked caps in these orders of dress
[9]. Troops from other services, regiments or corps on attachment to units with distinctive coloured berets often wear those berets (with their own cap badge).
Colonels,
brigadiers and
generals usually continue to wear the beret of the regiment or corps to which they used to belong with the cap badge distinctive to their rank.
Old Units
Former regiments and corps, now amalgamated, that did not wear navy blue berets included:
★ Khaki —
Green Howards,
King's Own Royal Border Regiment,
Prince of Wales's Own Regiment of Yorkshire,
Duke of Wellington's Regiment,
Reconnaissance Corps, infantry motor battalions in World War II
★ Dark (Rifle) green —
Light Infantry,
Royal Green Jackets,
Devonshire and Dorset Light Infantry,
Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Light Infantry,
Rifle Brigade,
King's Royal Rifle Corps,
2nd King Edward VII's Own Gurkha Rifles (The Sirmoor Rifles),
6th Queen Elizabeth's Own Gurkha Rifles,
7th Duke of Edinburgh's Own Gurkha Rifles,
10th Princess Mary's Own Gurkha Rifles
★ Black — all
Royal Armoured Corps regiments in World War II,
Westminster Dragoons,
Berkshire and Westminster Dragoons
★ Maroon —
Glider Pilot Regiment and glider-borne units
★ Green —
Women's Royal Army Corps, women in
Officers Training Corps (now wear navy blue)
United States
Berets were originally worn by elite forces in the
United States Army. Hence, there was controversy when in 2001 the United States Army adopted the black beret, previously reserved for the Rangers, as standard headgear for all army units.
[10] The Rangers are now distinguished by
tan berets. The
United States Army Special Forces are generally known as "green berets" for the colour of their headgear. Soldiers in special operations units wear distinctive organisational flashes. Conventional forces wear a pale blue flash with thirteen white stars. Officers wear their rank emblem within the flash, while enlisted ranks wear their regimental unit insignia. United States Army units can be distinguished by the colour of their berets, as follows:
★
Jungle green —
Special Forces, JFK Special Warfare School
★
Tan —
75th Ranger Regiment,
Ranger Training Brigade
★
Maroon —
paratroopers and all other Airborne units except
101st Airborne Division, other special operators (Civil Affairs, PSYOP) on jump status or under an airborne unit. Soldiers do not have to be jump qualified to wear the maroon beret
★
Black — all other Army units
The wearing of berets in the
United States Air Force is less common, but several career fields are authorised to wear berets of specific colours, as follows:
★ Scarlet —
Combat Controllers
★ Maroon —
Pararescue
★ Navy blue —
Security Forces
★ Black —
Tactical Air Control Party
★ Pewter grey —
Special Operations Weather Technicians
★ Grey —
Survival Evasion Resistance and Escape
★ Academy blue —
First Class (Senior) Academy Cadets
In the
United States Navy, women are authorized to wear a black beret with Service and Service Dress uniform regulations. The Officers Crest,
Chief's Anchor, and the silver eagle with USN are worn, as rank appropriate.
Berets in other paramilitary organisations
Iceland
The
Police Cadets, Riot unit and the members of the
Special Operations Unit of the National Commissioner of Icelandic Police (''Víkingasveitin'') wear black berets. High ranking members of the Reykjavík Air Rescue Unit are entitled to wear orange berets.
Italy
Dark blue berets are worn by the
Polizia di Stato and blue berets by the
Polizia Penitenziaria.
Malaysia
Dark blue berets are worn by the
Royal Malaysian Police. The elite ''
Pasukan Gerakan Khas'', the paramilitary Northern Brigade and the
General Operations Forces wear maroon berets. Some sub-units of the ''Pasukan Gerakan Khas'', including the VAT 69 Commandos, wear tan (sand) berets. The anti-riot Federal Reserve Units (FRU) wear red berets.
Portugal
The ''
Polícia de Segurança Pública'' (PSP) Intervention Corps wear navy blue berets, the Personal Security Corps (''Corpo de Segurança Pessoal'') (VIP bodyguards) wear sky blue berets, CIEXSS teams (explosive disposal) wear black berets, and the PSP
Special Operations Group wear emerald green berets.
The ''Guarda Prisional'' (Prison Guards) wear black berets.
The members of the paramilitary Rescue Corps of the Portuguese Red Cross wear purple berets.
Until their disbandment in 1975, the Angola and Mozambique paramilitary civil defence volunteers wore black berets.
Singapore
Black berets were worn by all members of the
Singapore Police Force until 1969, when the
peaked cap was introduced. The beret was, however, retained for specialist forces, such as officers of the
Special Operations Command (SOC) and the
Police Coast Guard, as well as the
Gurkha Contingent. A dark blue beret is worn, although the
Police Tactical Unit of the SOC switched to red berets in 2005. The Gurkha Contingent began wearing khaki-coloured berets from 2006.
Members of the
Singapore Civil Defence Force attached to a headquarters element, or on overseas missions, also wear black berets. These are adorned with the SCDF crest, and may sport a flash in certain specialist units, such as the Rescue Dog Unit and the elite
Disaster Assistance and Rescue Team.
Auxiliary police officers of
CISCO Security Private Limited don dark blue berets when performing escort and other high-risk duties, as do specialist forces of the
Singapore Prison Service. In addition, student cadets of uniformed
youth organizations such as the
National Police Cadet Corps and the
National Cadet Corps also wear berets of different colours.
South Africa
The Special Task Force of the
South African Police Service wear camouflage berets.
South Korea
Several police
SWAT teams belonging to different municipalities wear either maroon or green berets; Seoul Metropolitan Police SWAT team (Unit 868) wears maroon berets, while
Incheon Metropolitan Police SWAT team (Unit 313) wears green berets.
Spain and the Basque Country
The beret, ''boina'' in
Spanish or ''txapela'' in
Basque, was introduced into Spain during the
First Carlist War.
Carlists wore red berets (''txapelgorri'' in Basque, which later also came to mean "Carlist soldier") and Isabellines white ones.
The red beret became a
Falange symbol when Carlism was merged into it after the
Spanish Civil War.
Today the Basque police force,
Ertzaintza, wears red berets.
ETA guerrillas may wear black berets over hoods in public appearances.
Sri Lanka
The
Special Task Force of the
Sri Lanka Police wear green berets.
United Kingdom
CO19, the armed response unit of the
London Metropolitan Police, used to wear dark blue berets, and were nicknamed the 'Blue Berets'. Today, they generally wear helmets or baseball caps.
Hong Kong
The beret is the standard headgear of officers of the
Police Tactical Unit of the
Hong Kong Police Force. Officers are nicknamed the "Blue Berets" or the "Blue Caps".
Berets in civilian organizations
Aside from armed forces, berets are associated with a variety of other different organizations.
★ Berets are worn by some
scout groups, notably in Hong Kong and Britain, where green berets are worn, Thailand, where khaki berets are worn and in Poland where berets in different colors are one of few caps . The British and Hong Kong Air Scouts wear blue berets. Canadian Scouts eliminated their navy blue beret in the late 1990s, but it is slowly making a comeback among the older members in various forms, such as red for
Rover Scouts in
British Columbia. The
Boy Scouts of America are authorised to wear a red beret, although the BSA itself no longer makes them and very few scout troops or scouts wear them. The
Girl Scouts of the USA have worn green berets that often led to members of rival military units reminding the
United States Army Special Forces of the fact.
★ In Britain, berets are worn by the
Sea Cadet Corps (SCC),
Army Cadet Force (ACF),
Air Training Corps (ATC) and
Combined Cadet Force (CCF). These are in the appropriate service colour, with ACF and CCF Army Section units wearing the beret of the regiment or corps to which they are affiliated.
★ Berets are worn by the
Royal Canadian Army Cadets. They wear the same colour as their affiliated regular force unit, unless there is no affiliated unit, in which case a black beret is worn.
[11]
★ Navy blue berets have been the standard headdress of the
Royal Canadian Legion as well as other veterans' groups in Canada.
[12]
★ The
Guardian Angels have adopted a red beret as a recognizable item of clothing
[13]
★ Some security companies in Hong Kong such as
Securicor wear berets.
★ Members of the youth committee of the Mexican Red Cross used to wear a red beret, and black berets were worn by parachutists of the same institution. These were phased out in 2006, when a new uniform was issued.
★
Sousaphone players in
marching bands typically wear berets because the regular
combination cap would get in the way of the bell. All members of the
Ohio State University Marching Band wear scarlet berets with a "Diamond Ohio" flash when not wearing their uniform hat (essentially, whenever they are outdoors and not performing).
★ Most active members and supporters of the
Black Panther Party wore a beret, generally either black or red.
★ Members of the
Civil Air Patrol who attend National Blue Beret (NBB) in
Oshkosh, Wisconsin during the EAA AirVenture airshow can earn blue berets along with the Saint Alban's Cross, and the title of Blue Beret. Members of the Indiana Wing who achieve the classification of Ground Team Member level 3 (GTM3)
[14] are also awarded blue berets. CAP members who attend Hawk Mountain Ranger School and achieve the Advanced Ranger level are awarded black berets.
Other associations
Berets (''chapelas'', from
Basque ''txapela'') have become the standard headgear of the
Castilian peasant.
The beret was once considered the national hat of
France and is part of the stereotypical image of the
Onion Johnny. It has diminished in popularity, just as hats for men all over the world have waned in popularity. Still considered a matter of French pride, it is worn by both women and men. Black is the traditional colour. There are only two manufacturers left in France that make berets.
The beret is also a stereotyped trademark of
film directors,
artists (particularly painters),
intellectuals, Bohemians, and
Beatniks of any nationality.
Schoolgirls often wear berets with their
school uniforms. When searching for a suitable style of beret to be worn by the
Royal Tank Regiment (RTR), the French
Chasseurs alpins was rejected as being too big. The RTR selected a model worn by an Girls School.
Some British comedians have been identified with the beret;
Chris Langham is recorded as having announced to actor
Ken Campbell that he has named the tassle or stalk which is present in some berets the ''langham'', after himself.
Michael Crawford also wore a beret as
Frank Spencer. Other entertainment figures identified with the beret include
Jamie Hyneman of ''
MythBusters'', and
Fred Berry who played Rerun in ''
What's Happening!!'' and ''
What's Happening Now!!'' (as well as in real life). It is said that
Groucho Marx wore a beret that he could carry in his pocket to avoid tipping hat-check girls when he went to restaurants and night clubs.
The beret is sometimes worn simply as a
fashion statement.
See also
★
Biretta
★
Black beret
★
Green beret
★
Maroon beret
★
Tan beret
★
Mohair berets
★
Marching beret
★
United States Army Special Forces in popular culture
Notes
1. Encyclopaedia Britannica'', 1911 Edition
2. Australian Army Standing Orders for Dress
3. ''Dressed to Kill'' (Service Publications, Ottawa, ON, 2001) ISBN 1-894581-07-5
4. canadiansoldiers.com
5. PLA Caps and decorations
6. Edict about military uniforms (in Czech)
7. Gordon, David. ''Uniforms of the World War II Tommy'' (Pictorial Histories Publishing Company, Missoula, MT, 2005). ISBN 1-57510-122-X
8. BBC website on British headdress
9. http://www.ams.mod.uk/content/docs/jsp336/3rd_ed/vol12/pt3/pam15/s5aa.doc
10. The Army Black Beret
11. Army Cadet Dress Regualtions CATO 46-01
12. Article in ''Legion Magazine'', Jan-Feb 2006
13. Guardian Angels website
14. Indiana Wing's supplement to CAPM39-1
External links
★
Page at canadiansoldiers.com on berets in the Canadian military