Published by an old curmudgeon who came to America in 1936 as a refugee from Nazi Germany and proudly served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He is a former law enforcement officer and a retired professor of criminal justice who, in 1970, founded the Texas Narcotic Officers Association. BarkGrowlBite refuses to be politically correct.
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Monday, September 12, 2022
YOU CAN'T BE A PUSSY AND BE A US NAVY SEAL
End of Navy SEALs as we know it? Navy to investigate famous SEAL BUD/S course says report
By Ryan Morgan
American Military News
September 12, 2022
Frequent plunges in the frigid Pacific Ocean are one of the most difficult aspects of training.
The
U.S. Navy has ordered a high-level investigation of the Basic
Underwater Demolition/SEALs (BUD/S) course, according to a new report on
Friday. Such a high-level investigation into a major SEAL component
could open the floodgates to congressional scrutiny and reform,
potentially changing the entire course of the Navy SEALs.
Vice Chief of Naval Operations, Adm. William K. Lescher ordered the investigation in a letter obtained and reported by
the New York Times. Lescher ordered a rear admiral from outside the
SEAL leadership to conduct the investigation. Those investigating the
BUD/S course to report back with their findings within 30 days.
An example of forced suffering that SEAL candidates experience throughout training
According
to the New York Times, the Navy has grown concerned that the SEAL
community has placed too much emphasis on forced suffering while
incentivizing recruits to ignore potentially serious illnesses and
injuries. The New York Times reported there is a growing subculture
among BUD/S candidates of using performance-enhancing drugs to get
through the rigorous 24-week course that serves as the first part of the
process to become a SEAL.
Lescher’s
letter ordering the investigation calls on investigators to look into
the course’s safety measures, the qualifications of instructors and
medical personnel and its drug testing policies for students.
SEAL candidates during Basic Underwater Demolition training (BUD/S)
BUD/S
has had a long-standing reputation as a grueling training course and in
the past, the SEAL community has welcomed the difficulty as a rite of
passage before candidates may go on to serve in some of the most
high-risk combat missions.
Only
about one in four BUD/S candidates have passed the course in the past
20 years. Since February of 2021, the pass rate for BUD/S has fallen to
about half the average seen in the past 20 years. Some classes had only
seen seven percent of candidates pass in that time.
The
drop in BUD/S pass rates reportedly coincided with the arrival the
course’s latest command team, led by Capt. Bradley Geary. Geary has
served with the SEAL’s most elite team, known as SEAL Team 6 or the
Naval Special Warfare Development Group (DevGru).
Throughout
Geary’s tenure as the leader of the BUD/S course command team, the
course had reportedly been even harder than normal and several safety
warnings have gone unanswered.
“He
was in a wheelchair most of the time, unable to stand and walk on his
own,” the autopsy report stated. “He had reportedly been
coughing/spitting up red-tinged fluid which had nearly filled a 36 oz.
sports drink bottle.”
The
SEAL candidate’s mother, Regina Mullen, recalled that he had discussed
facing mistreatment in August and his face was swollen and he was
spitting up blood during his second week of BUD/S in January.
The
autopsy report said one of the other SEAL candidates in Mullen’s class
requested medical attention at the end of Hell Week due to feeling like
he couldn’t breathe. As an ambulance arrived for that candidate, Mullen
also became unresponsive.
“When
the ambulance crew arrived, they shifted their attention to Seaman
Mullen and transported him to the hospital, where he was later
pronounced deceased,” the autopsy report stated.
After
reading the autopsy report, Regina Mullen told NJ.com “I want them all
in jail … never able to work in the Navy. They should be in jail.
“This
is like murder to me and no one seems to care, but I care and I’m not
going to stop,” she said. “My whole community cares.”
A
candidate who was with Mullen during BUD/S said Mullen fell behind on
runs and instructors singled him out for “remediation” which meant extra
push-ups, situps and plunges into the surf that all likely worsened his
condition. Mullen’s fellow BUD/S candidate told the New York Times he
collapsed at one point and an instructor repeatedly kicked him and told
him to quit. Mullen continued to push through the pain.
At one point, Mullen spoke on the phone with his mother and she could tell he was in poor health.
“I said, go to the hospital right away,” Regina Mullen told the
New York Times. “He said, ‘No, ma, if you want to go to the hospital,
they will make you quit first. Besides, it’s just SIPE.’”
SIPE,
or swimming-induced pulmonary edema, is a potentially life-threatening
ailment that is reportedly so common among BUD/S candidates that they
mostly just refer to it by its acronym. The condition can cause
candidates like Mullen to spit and cough up bloody fluid.
Mullen
reportedly began secretly taking Viagra; a drug mostly used for
erectile dysfunction but which can potentially treat SIPE. Navy rules
prohibit the drug’s use, but Mullen began taking Viagra on the advice of
other BUD/S candidates.
It seems that a LOT of the seal trainees were taking steroids and one died at the end of hell week from pulmonary pneumonia. The old commander of Seal Team 6 is now the had of the full Seal training program and there is some level of belief that he is going WAY over the top on the physical abuse / harassment program.
1 comment:
It seems that a LOT of the seal trainees were taking steroids and one died at the end of hell week from pulmonary pneumonia. The old commander of Seal Team 6 is now the had of the full Seal training program and there is some level of belief that he is going WAY over the top on the physical abuse / harassment program.
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