I'm not aware of any special forces unit in the US that had a spade (or shovel) as part of their patch.
The 1st Special Service Forces were a mixture of American and Canadian commandos who wore a RED arrowhead with USA and Canada inscribed on it.
I thought you might refer to the US Engineers. But their collar brass was a Castle.
Germany had an organization that worked on defenses but they were not a special forces fighting unit.
If the soldier were carrying a flag, the flag would appear "backwards" when viewed from the soldier's right. Thus, the right side patch is backwards. It's the same reason that the flag is painted backwards on the right side of airplanes and other vehicles.
Harry Patch was, until recently, the oldest surviving veteran of World War I in Britain. He died very recently so he would no longer be listed as a surviving vet.
I am not 100 percent certain, but I believe this is a patch for a WWII Army Air Force aircrew radioman. It would have been worn on the lower right sleeve of his uniform jacket.
Depends on condition, and what they are. The answer is too broad. You need to be more specific.
We have a patch type peice that belonged to my grandfather and he was in World War II. It has a medical symbol and a capital T on coat of arms looking picture at top with word Tampere across the bottom. Is white with silver trim and shaped like a small flag with points on bottom. Just trying to figure out what it represents.
They could be assigned to Special Forces, but only as support personnel, and not as an actual operator. Non SF-qualified personnel in Special Forces Groups can be identified by the absence of the Special Forces tab above their unit patch, and their wear of the maroon beret, rather than the green beret.
they symbolize the three methods of infiltration; air, land, and sea
There is 9 unlocks for battlefield providing u have all the patch's, a further 7 are obtainable if the special forces add-on is installed
SAS Special Air Service if your referring to British knives.
On the left shoulder, that is the current unit patch, on the right shoulder it would be a combat unit patch. Also there are tabs that can go above the patches if qualified to wear them. Ie: Ranger, Sapper, Special Forces.
As actual operators? None. The 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment is open to females, but Special Forces groups, Ranger Battalions, SEAL teams, etc. are not. The unit may have female personnel assigned to in, but in non-operational roles - for instance, you may see females assigned to Special Forces, but they'll wear the maroon beret, rather than green, and won't wear the Special Forces tab above their patch, because they're not actually SF operators.
To clarify, When I try to install the V1.1 patch for Empire at War, Forces of Corruption, it tells me it cannot locate the game files and suggests I reinstall. Even after several reinstalls, it still says it cannot locate the Forces of Corruption files, and therefore cannot install the patch.
Patch 5.0.0 should be the next major content patch (right before Mists of Pandaria comes out) for World of Warcraft. There probably will not be a patch 4.4.
The patch is from the 1st Special Service Force, sometimes known as "The Devils's Brigade".
www.worldofwarcraft.com/patchnotes/3.2.0
The patch is already out.Lol. Its came out at about March 2009.Patch 3.2.2
The 5.0.4 patch for World of Warcraft hit the live servers on Tuesday, August 28th, 2012.