Malayan Scouts (Special Air Service Regiment)

Malayan Scouts (Special Air Service Regiment)
FoundedJune 1950
Disbanded1960 (End of the Malayan Emergency)
Country Malaya / British Malaya (1950–December 1951)
 United Kingdom (from 22 December 1951)
BranchFederation of Malaya security forces (1950–December 1951);
 British Army (from 22 December 1951)
TypeSpecial forces
Size5 combat squadrons, 1 manhunt squadron, and 3 support company (HQ, Logistics, and Intelligence)
Part ofMalaya Command
HeadquartersSungai Besi, Kuala Lumpur
Nickname(s)Malayan Scouts (SAS), Malay Scouts, Tentera Bersayap (Malay for 'Winged Soldiers')
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Mike Calvert, George Lea, Tony Deane-Drummond

The Malayan Scouts (Special Air Service Regiment), commonly referred to as the Malayan Scouts, was a temporary special forces unit established in 1950 by the British de facto protectorate government of the Federation of Malaya during the Malayan Emergency. Tasked primarily with conducting air assault and airborne operations, anti-irregular forces, clandestine operations, commando style raids, counterinsurgency, irregular warfare, jungle and mountain warfare, long-range penetration, maneuver warfare, and special reconnaissance in dense rainforest terrain, the unit's mission was to locate, harass, and neutralise insurgents from the Malayan Communist Party.

The Malayan Scouts were formed as a successor to the Ferret Force, an earlier but short-lived special force. Unlike the 21st Special Air Service Regiment (21 SAS) based in the United Kingdom, the Malayan Scouts initially operated as an independent entity with no formal affiliation to the existing SAS. However, their effectiveness in air assault and airborne operations, anti-irregular forces, commando style raids in mountainous forest areas, counterinsurgency operations quickly, irregular warfare, long-range penetration, maneuver warfare, and special reconnaissance earned them official recognition. On 22 December 1951, the British Army formally incorporated the unit into its order of battle, renaming it the 22nd Special Air Service Regiment (22 SAS).

Despite the official renaming, the unit continued to be widely known as the Malayan Scouts throughout its operations in British Malaya. It was only formally recognised as 22 SAS after its headquarters was relocated from Sungai Besi, Kuala Lumpur, to Worcestershire in 1958 and later to Herefordshire in 1960.

The success of the Malayan Scouts played a pivotal role in shaping the future of British special operations. At the time, the British government had considered disbanding the SAS following the conclusion of World War II. However, the Scouts' performance during the Emergency demonstrated the enduring relevance and effectiveness of special forces in modern conflicts, ultimately securing the SAS's survival. Moreover, the Malayan Scouts served as the foundational model for several elite units around the world, including the Australian Special Air Service Regiment (SASR), New Zealand Special Air Service (NZSAS), and the Rhodesian Special Air Service (Rhodesian SAS).