​SOCNORTH Unit History


In response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, U.S. Northern Command was established on October 1, 2002, and charged with the mission to protect the homeland, with an area of responsibility spanning the continental United States, Canada, Mexico, and the Bahamas. Within USNORTHCOM, a small staff element, the Special Operations Division, had the responsibility of integrating Special Operations and regional partnership in support of the Combatant Command’s lines of effort. As partnership with Mexico, the Bahamas, and Canada expanded, U.S. Special Operations Command and USNORTHCOM realized a Theater Special Operations Command was necessary to enhance the command and control of special operation forces throughout the USNORTHCOM area of responsibility.

On December 11, 2012, the Secretary of Defense directed the establishment of Special Operations Command North at the request of the USSOCOM and USNORTHCOM commanders. Their vision was an organization built around the USNORTHCOM Special Operations Division, which would normalize Special Operations command and control and enhance execution of existing security cooperation, civil support, and homeland defense responsibilities in the USNORTHCOM area of responsibility. Activated on Nov. 5, 2013, SOCNORTH was tasked to provide command, control, and coordination of Special Operations in support of USNORTHCOM building upon the SOD established relationships with U.S. government departments and agencies, partner nations, and other organizations as part of an integrated theater strategy to promote regional security, outpace threats, and advance U.S. strategic interests.

Since its establishment, SOCNORTH has matured and now includes representatives from across the whole of government as well as Canada’s Special Operations Forces Command. Its personnel have distinguished themselves by building partner nation special operational capacity, improving our partners’ operational and tactical understanding of the security challenges facing the United States, and providing critical capabilities to civil authorities when required. SOCNORTH provides USNORTHCOM, its operational control headquarters, access to USSOCOM’s SOF enterprise, which deepens the USNORTHCOM combatant command’s understanding of the trans-regional, all domain, and multi-functional environment. Over the past decade, SOCNORTH has expanded its scope and scale from its original mandate to a highly operational command that can defend forward, generate effects below the level of conflict, and conduct day-to-day campaigning.

Key to SOCNORTH’s success has been, and will continue to be, the intelligence, maturity, judgement, and interpersonal skills of the officers, warrant officers, non-commissioned officers, soldiers, sailors, marines, airmen, guardians, and civilian personnel assigned to SOCNORTH.



SOCNORTH Unit Crest / Shoulder Patch Symbolism

SOCNORTH Unit Crest (Shoulder Patch)

The gold spearhead represents Special Operations Command North’s combatant command relationship to U.S. Special Operations Command. Blue is the prominent color of the insignia and is indicative of the Command’s patriotism, loyalty, and devotion to duty. The eight-pointed polestar denotes the North Star which historically has been used by service members to orientate themselves. The V-42 dagger was the fighting knife issued to the First Special Force, a joint American/Canadian commando unit during WWII. The four instances of the dagger represent both the four nations in U.S. Northern Command’s area of responsibility: United States, Canada, Mexico, and the Bahamas. The four daggers further denote the four services which make up special operations. The single larger dagger pointing north is further recognition to the Northern American geography associated with the Command.