The flaw in that article is in this line:
"In Canada, today's elite and highly secretive JTF2 military unit is also modeled on the Devil's Brigade."
I don't recall an anti-terrorist role for 1SSF. They were closer to the WWII role of Commando. Despite the media's use of "commando" in reference to JTF2, among others, there is little or no relation.
If you link to the wikipedia piece on JTF2 you'll also see the following:
"The Canadian Forces also has Army snipers, its Pathfinder courses held at 8 Wing/Canadian Forces Base Trenton and the Canadian graduates of the U.S. Army Ranger Course. In other countries these qualifications might be part of their Special Operations Forces units, but in Canada, they are embedded in conventional combat units and are not considered to be of a "special forces" nature."
And goes on to say:
"Lineage. The JTF2 states that it does NOT perpetuate the Canadian Airborne Regiment although some of its members have come from that now-disbanded unit. Rather it notes that Canadians served with distinction in several types of Allied Special Forces units during the Second World War. One such unit was the legendary U.S. and Canadian combined 1st Special Service Force or, as it was commonly known, "the Devil's Brigade." It achieved a sterling combat record despite overwhelming odds. While tactics, weapons and technology have changed, today's JTF 2 soldiers are perpetuating the basic qualities that define such units."
Which looks to me to be a claim to the "qualities" of those soldiers, not an actual claim to unit lineage. JTF2's origins are a matter of public record. Maybe their links should be to the RCMP?
Acorn