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There are 2,500 Seals in total, and they take their name from the environments in which they are trained to work – sea, air and land. But it is their highly specialised training to operate in water that they are best known for.
Their missions can be enormously varied in nature, involving combat, anti-terrorism and hostage rescues.
These guys are America’s thoroughbreds, says Don Shipley, from Virginia, who spent two decades in the Navy as a Seal.
“They’re the finest guys America has. Your average guy walking down the street just doesn’t have it.
“The guys that become Seals have gifted eyesight, above average intelligence, and are genetically built to withstand a lot of punishment, being pounded a lot. Those are the guys that are qualified to get in but the guys that ultimately come out are thoroughbreds, they’re racehorses.”

I never thought about dropping out”
Stew Smith, former Seal on the gruelling training
It is often described as the toughest training available to any special forces anywhere in the world. The drop-out rate is 80-85%.
Stew Smith, a Seal for eight years, now runs fitness training courses in Maryland for people who are thinking of joining up.
He says the first six months of Seal training, known as Basic Underwater Demolition (Buds) is the toughest. It includes one period which lasts a continuous 120 hours, and involves swimming, running, obstacle courses, scuba diving and navigation.
The current Buds training course has already lost 190 recruits out of 245, and is only three weeks in, he says.
“I never thought about dropping out. People ask me why not, and I say that you have to go there in a mindset of competing, not just surviving.
- Elite force of Seals, based near Virginia Beach
- Selected from all the units, to carry out the most demanding missions
- Usually have five years of experience already
- The unit belongs to the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) which is run at a cost of more than $1bn a year
- Involved in Yemen, Somalia and Afghanistan in recent years
- Existence shrouded in mystery
- They reportedly train around the clock and can spend 300 days a year away from home
“If you’re running your first marathon, your goal is just to finish the thing, you’re in a survival mode. But when you’re stretching out before, you look across and see a Kenyan who is trying to drop a minute off his best time.
“There is a different mindset. For me, every day in training was a competition.”
After Buds, you are officially a Seal and assigned to a team but you need to have another 12 months of training with your new colleagues before you are deployed, says Mr Smith.
He believes what makes Seals special is their versatility.
“Also, having a strong confidence with the boat, and a relationship with the Navy, we have a way of respecting Mother Nature because we realise that when you’re out there in the middle of the ocean, you’re just a speck.”
This familiarity with the vagaries of the weather teaches Seals to always have a Plan B, he says. “There’s a saying in the Seals that two is one and one is nothing.”

Seal training is gruelling, and many recruits drop out
The origins of the Seals can be traced to World War II, and its predecessors like the Naval Combat Demolition Unit, which was involved in the invasion of North Africa in 1942.
Their formation came out of a $100m (£61m) package by President John F Kennedy to strengthen the US special forces capability.
They were later involved in Vietnam, Grenada and in Panama, where four Seals were killed as they tried to prevent leader Manuel Noriega escaping by destroying his jet and boat.
The episode was also renowned for an incident a few days later, in which loud rock music was played all day and night to force him out of his refuge in Panama City.
In more recent years, the Seals have been heavily involved in missions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
But their role in the death of Osama Bin Laden writes another chapter in their history.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-13270926
Related:

The Navy was an easy choice for Wasdin at age 20, when he had no college degree and no money to afford one. Breaking from his abusive father and rough-and-tumble upbringing, Wasdin found that his steely skin meshed well with the demanding requirements of the Navy. Through boot camp and the Navy’s rigorous search-and-rescue training program, Wasdin proved his military prowess, a status confirmed when the Navy tapped him for the elite Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S) training.
http://battleland.blogs.time.com/2011/05/10/inside-seal-team-six/#ixzz1MNnSk9CM
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