A soldier specially trained for rapid raids and assault missions, or the military unit itself.
From Afrikaans kommando, from Portuguese comando (command). Originally described Boer military units in South Africa, adopted by British forces during WWII.
The modern commando concept was inspired by Boer guerrilla tactics during the Second Boer War, proving that small, mobile units could outmaneuver larger conventional forces! This revolutionized military thinking.
Commando imagery defaults to male soldiers/warriors in popular language. Female combatants, resistance fighters, and soldiers are linguistically absorbed into neutral-but-male 'commando,' erasing their distinct military histories.
Specify forces/units if gender-specific history exists. Avoid male-as-default assumption in military contexts.
Female commandos and special forces operators (YPJ in Syria, Israeli units, SOF globally) have shaped modern asymmetric warfare—naming them restores their strategic and historical significance.
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