Facts About Navy Seals

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Intro: Facts About Navy Seals

STEP 1:

1. Navy SEALS take part in reconnaissance missions, direct action missions, information warfare, terrorism warfare, recovering personnel, anti-drug operations and many other types of missions. 2.Navy SEALS make up less than 1% of all United States Navy personnel, but despite their small numbers they make a huge strategic impact on every operation of which they a™re a part. 3.Because of the specialized training, SEALS can just do combat coming from the sea, but they a™re trained in desert, urban and jungle conditions, and can handle explosives and jump from airplanes that they are trained in every useful skill.

STEP 2:

4. Navy SEAL stands for Sea, Air and Land because they a™re trained to handle themselves equal well in all these situations. 5.Though they a™re trained in a variety of ways, Navy SEALS specialize in combat in surprise strikes from the sea as well as a secretive return to the sea. This allows them to strike and return clandestinely numerous times doing the most damage possible, and achieving aims that larger troops couldn™t manage without being noticed.

STEP 3: TRAINING

6.SEAL training is brutal. It takes over 30 months to train a Navy SEAL to the point at which he will be ready for deployment. The SEALs that emerge are ready to handle pretty much any task they could be called on to perform, including diving, combat swimming, navigation, demolitions, weapons, and parachuting 7.The training pushes them to the limit both mentally and physically in order to weed out those who may not be able to successfully complete the demanding missions and operations with which SEALs are faced. The types of stresses they endure during BUD/S (Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL) are the same stresses they will endure as SEALs. If they can't withstand it when lives aren't on the line, chances are good they won't be able to withstand it when lives are at stake.

3 Comments

Hello, I am glad that you want to participate in the Instructables community. Unfortunately, this does not qualify as an Instructable. However, this would make a great forum topic. Please post this in the forums.
With all the due respect for the service men and women, instructables should be used to teach something you know and not to promote anything that it is not maker related.