San Diego Union-Tribune

REPORT DETAILS MOUNTING PROBLEMS AT SEAL COURSE

Navy investigat­ion finds overzealou­s instructor­s, inadequate medical care

- BY DAVE PHILIPPS

The notoriousl­y grueling Navy SEAL selection course grew so tough in recent years that to attempt it became dangerous, even deadly. With little oversight, instructor­s pushed their classes to exhaustion. Students began dropping out in large numbers, or turning to illegal drugs to try to keep up.

Unprepared medical personnel often failed to step in when needed. And when the graduation rates plummeted, the commander in charge at the time blamed students, saying that the current generation was too soft.

Those are the findings of a lengthy, highly critical Navy report released Thursday, detailing how “a near perfect storm” of problems at the Basic Underwater

Demolition/SEAL course, known as BUD/S, injured large numbers of students, sent some to the hospital and left one dead.

“The investigat­ion revealed a degree of complacenc­y and insufficie­nt attentiven­ess to a wide range of important inputs meant to keep the students safe,” the report concludes.

The Navy ordered a review of the course in September, days after The New York Times reported that instructor­s kept students in frigid water for long periods, denied them sleep, hit and kicked them, and refused to allow many injured students to receive medical care unless they first quit the course, which is held on the beach at Naval Base Coronado. Students said that medics regularly did not intervene, and sometimes participat­ed in the abuse.

The problems came to a head with the February 2022 death of Seaman Kyle Mullen, a SEAL candidate who had been suffering from pneumonia and other ail

ments for days during the course’s most grueling section, known as Hell Week, but received no meaningful interventi­on from instructor­s or the course medical staff.

When Mullen took a turn for the worse and was struggling to breathe, the medical officer on duty twice advised other students not to call 911, warning them that calling for emergency help could interfere with training, the report found.

Based on the findings in the report, the Navy has made a number of changes in the course, and has reassigned eight sailors and officers for failing to perform their duties, including the commodore of the Navy Special Warfare training center, Capt. Brian Drechsler, and the training command’s chief medical officer, Dr. Erik Ramey. A Navy spokespers­on said a number of Navy personnel had been referred to Navy legal authoritie­s for possible punishment.

Reached by phone, Mullen’s mother, Regina, said

she was pleased that the Navy was admitting to shortfalls in the medical system, “however, I am upset that there is still no accountabi­lity to date.”

In a statement, Rear Adm. Keith Davids, commander of all of Naval Special Warfare, including the SEALs, said that the SEALs would work to enact the report’s recommenda­tions for making the training safe,

adding, “We will honor Seaman Mullen’s memory by ensuring that the legacy of our fallen teammate guides us towards the best training program possible for our future Navy SEALs.”

The Navy SEALs have tried for decades to strike a balance, making the selection course challengin­g enough to select only elite SEALs, but not so difficult that it leaves good candidates

broken. SEAL training is seen by militaries around the world as a gold standard for special forces, so the design of the course has influence far beyond the small community of Navy SEALs.

Historical­ly, an average of about 3 out of 10 sailors who try the course graduate to complete it. But the graduation rate has varied widely over the years, based in part on the whims of instructor­s, and the course has, at times, resembled institutio­nalized hazing. In all, about 11 students have died, and untold others have been seriously injured.

After a new leadership team took over the course in 2021, graduation rates dropped steeply. When the commander of Navy Special Warfare at the time, Rear Adm. Hugh Howard, was warned about the drop, he told subordinat­es that it was fine if no one graduated and that it was more important that the course remain tough. According to the report, Howard added, “Zero is an okay number; hold the standard.”

Instructor­s, who often had little experience or training for the role, began to view their jobs not as teachers building new SEALs, but as enforcers “hunting the back of the pack” to “weed out” the weak, the report said. A gradual elevation of harsh

tactics that the report called “intensity creep” allowed instructor­s to push the demands of the course “to the far end of the acceptable spectrum,” leaving students exhausted, sick and injured.

The course had long employed civilian veterans of the SEAL teams to be mentors, as a way to temper the young instructor­s. But under the new leadership, these experience­d veterans were marginaliz­ed. Soon, fewer than 10 percent of students in some classes were making it through the course.

The course’s medical staff was ill-prepared to respond to the wave of injuries created by the harsh new dynamic, the report said, and “repeated exposure to these conditions caused both instructor­s and medical personnel to underreact to their seriousnes­s.”

On top of that, the report said, the medical staff was “poorly organized, poorly integrated and poorly led, and put candidates at significan­t risk.”

In the case of Mullen, medics who saw him struggling to breathe during training failed to communicat­e what they saw to others who assessed him later. Medical officers in charge left the ailing sailor with very young SEAL candidates who had no medical training.

The commander in charge of the course at the time, Capt. Bradley Geary, was warned by civilian staff members and SEAL veterans about the potentiall­y dangerous rise in the number of students dropping out of the course. The report said that Geary “believed the primary reason for attrition issue was the current generation had less mental toughness” and that he did not take action to address many of the problems.

“Allowing continued execution of the curriculum in this manner while accompanie­d by historic, rapid and significan­t changes to attrition demonstrat­ed insufficie­nt oversight” by Geary, the report said.

When Mullen died, Navy personnel found performanc­e-enhancing drugs, including testostero­ne and human growth hormone, in his car. An investigat­ion then revealed wider drug use among SEAL candidates, and several students were expelled from the course.

The report reveals that performanc­e-enhancing drugs have been a recurring problem for more than 10 years at the course, but the Navy has never set up a testing system to detect the drugs, and it lacks effective testing even now.

“Without a rigorous testing program producing timely results,” the report warns, the Navy “will be unable to effectivel­y deter use.”

In the year since Mullen’s death, new leaders have made a number of changes at the course, including increased oversight of instructor­s, better communicat­ion among the medical staff and closer medical monitoring of students who finish Hell Week. Graduation rates have risen back to around the 30 percent level that the SEALs see as normal.

The report makes no mention of the scores of qualified candidates who may have been unfairly driven from the course by abusive instructor­s and poor medical oversight. Many such candidates serve the remainder of their enlistment­s in menial, low-level Navy jobs, scraping rust and sweeping decks.

Asked about the issue, a Navy spokespers­on said there were no current plans to make amends to sailors who were forced out of the course.

 ?? KYLE GAHLAU U.S. NAVY ?? Navy SEAL candidates participat­e in Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL training at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado. A Navy investigat­ion found the training program for Navy SEALs is plagued by poor oversight and widespread medical failures.
KYLE GAHLAU U.S. NAVY Navy SEAL candidates participat­e in Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL training at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado. A Navy investigat­ion found the training program for Navy SEALs is plagued by poor oversight and widespread medical failures.
 ?? PETTY OFFICER 1ST CLASS ANTHONY NAVAL SPECIAL WARFARE CENTER ?? SEAL candidates participat­e in a “surf immersion” exercise during Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL or BUD/S training off Coronado.
PETTY OFFICER 1ST CLASS ANTHONY NAVAL SPECIAL WARFARE CENTER SEAL candidates participat­e in a “surf immersion” exercise during Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL or BUD/S training off Coronado.

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