Petty Officer 2nd Class Marc Alan Lee was one of the world's most
highly skilled unconventional warriors - a U.S. Navy seal. But on the
morning of August 2, the 28-year-old Oregon native was detached to a
conventional U.S. Army force tasked with hunting-down guerrillas in a
Ramadi neighborhood where four U.S. Marines had been killed the previous
week.
When a firefight erupted between the Americans (and an
accompanying Iraqi force) and a band of guerrillas, one seal was
wounded, shot in the cheek by an enemy sniper. In the ensuing hour-long
fight, stretching over several city blocks, another seal was struck in
the shoulder.
Lee, who positioned himself between the two men,
provided covering fire as they were evacuated. But he was later killed
by a blast of machinegun fire. Lee was the first seal to die in Iraq.
His actions during the fight have been reported as "heroic," and he has
been posthumously awarded the Silver Star to go along with his Bronze
Star medal (with Combat V), Purple Heart, and a Combat Action Ribbon.
But some members of the Naval Special Warfare community are telling me
he did not have to die, with one officer contending, "They're burning up
seal." The problem lies in the manner in which seals and other special
operators are being deployed and for what kinds of missions.
"Special
Operations warriors are not dispensable assets," says Reserve seal
Commander Mark Divine, who has been to Iraq several times and was tasked
with evaluating the performance of a new Marine Corps special
operations force during its developmental stages in 2004. "It will take
two years to replace Lee with another combat-ready seal."
The seal
community is undermanned as it is, and it is the Navy's number-one
recruiting priority." Divine's concerns are based on the fact that the
U.S. Defense Department is looking to boost its numbers of special
operators, currently totaling about 40,000, by 15 percent over the next
four years. SEALs, less than 2,500 men, must increase by about 20
percent, and without reducing standards.
The Global War on Terror -
with all of its backdoors and shadows and high-tech, asymmetrical,
rapidly changing battle spaces - has placed an enormous demand on U.S.
special-warfare units. After all, these are the guys tasked with
operating in the darkest environs. Consequently, taking a smart,
committed young man with an athletic bent (Lee himself was a star soccer
player in high school) and transforming him into a Navy SEAL is neither
cheap - about $350,000 a copy - nor easy. Most seal hopefuls are unable
to pass the entry physical fitness test. And most that do pass the PFT
simply don't have what it takes to become a seal.
The attrition
rate is extremely high for seals: A staggering 80 percent fail to
complete the hellish six-months of Basic Underwater Demolition/seal
training (BUD/S). Those who do survive BUD/S must again prove themselves
in an equally demanding post-graduate period with an active SEAL Team
before officially becoming seals.
Special-operations teams like
SEALs - including the super-secret Naval Special Warfare Development
Group (formerly seal Team Six) - the Army's special-operations forces
(from Rangers to Green Berets to Delta), Air Force special-tactics
teams, and the Marine Corps' Force Recon and the brand-new Marine Corps
Special Operations Command (MARSOC) teams, are responsible for
conducting special missions, including counterterrorism, hostage
rescues, prisoner snatches, foreign military training, special
reconnaissance, sabotage, direct action, and the targeting of enemy
leaders, among other highly sensitive operations.
And many of
those operations - though unknown thus never reported - have tremendous
strategic relevance. "In the context of Iraq, SEALs, who comprise a
fraction of the Navy's total force, are trained to handle those kinds of
missions," Divine tells National Review Online. "Every man is a
critical asset in the war on terror. So to squander a life in support of
a general cordon and search operation is just wrong."
Divine says
he first witnessed such misuse of SEALs back in 2004."The conventional
commanders would send a formal or informal request to the JSOTF [Joint
Special Operations Task Force] for some sniper team support, and if the
guys [special operators] were not employed they would usually say,
'okay,'" Divine says. "The [seal] Team guys did not mind because they
wanted action.
"But a 24-year-old's motivation, and then the sound
battlefield judgment on the part of the special-operations force
leaders are two different things altogether. SEALs will always run
toward the sound of the guns. It's up to the leaders to protect them so
that they can perform the high-value missions the taxpayers put them
through training for." Former SEAL John Chalus, who had one combat tour
in Vietnam and whose two sons would later serve in the Navy (one of whom
was a seal), tells NRO, " seals should not be combined with regular
units unless the regular unit is used to support the special operation."
Conventional
units often provide security for special operators, setting up a
perimeter around the operation and "keeping the bad guys at bay," says
Chalus. And of course, special operators often conduct reconnaissance
and gather intelligence for conventional operations. Richard Marcinko,
the founder and first commander of seal Team Six, as well as the
best-selling author of the Rogue Warrior book series, compares employing
SEALs in a conventional capacity to "driving a Ferrari across the
desert like a dune-buggy."
It is a "waste of training," Marcinko
tells NRO. "The conventional force commanders use them for conventional
missions for two primary reasons. First, they know they have a mature
warrior [in a SEAL]. He's been to a lot of schools, and he's not some
19-year-old kid with limited training. Second, using SEALs or other
highly trained Spec Ops guys protects whoever is in charge of the
conventional operation. It's kind of a political cover you're thing to
say, 'hey, I sent in the teams that wouldn't embarrass me.'"
Conventional
commanders know SEALs will almost always kill or capture any bad guys
encountered. Commanders also have an appreciation for the war-fighting
skills special operators like SEALs might impart to conventional
soldiers and sailors. And the SEALs themselves are always willing to
pitch in on missions outside of their traditional roles. "Particularly
the young kids who have just come out of BUD/S," says Marcinko. "They've
never been in combat, and they want to test what they're made of."
Some
seals have told me that actual operations seem not nearly as tough as
their training. But unlike a gun battle, almost no one dies in training,
even training as high-speed and dangerous as that of the seals. A
former U.S. Marine infantry leader, W. Thomas Smith Jr. writes about
military issues and has covered conflict in the Balkans and on the West
Bank. He is the author of five books, and his articles appear in a
variety of publications.
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