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Ancient SEALs: The Byzantine Divers

Monday, October 5th, 2009

navy-seal-4-300x240 Ancient SEALs: The Byzantine Divers

We all went through it at different stages in our education: the study of history, struggling through the grueling task of having to remember countless figures, dates, names and places from years gone by. For some, the study of history can be quite a boring chore that does not yield any immediate advantages or results, especially for those who majored in such studies as business or economics. However, if we look beyond the names and the dates, we come to realize that much – if not all – of what we get to enjoy today can be attributed to the lessons that history taught.

The Navy SEALs are no exception. While for the most part, Navy SEAL history begins with military feats and experiences during the wars fought in the 20th century, the concept of the SEAL – that elite team of courageous and exceptionally skilled warriors – can be traced back even further in the annals of time.

Let us take, for instance, the SEALs’ exceptional skills at sea: they are, as most readers may very well know by now, known as skilled divers. If we backtrack a couple thousand years or so, we will find ourselves in ancient Byzantium, where an elite team of ancient divers defend the city by employing an ancient diving technique.

These fearless divers, armed with especially designed tools, defend their beloved city by capturing enemy ships underwater. Unbeknownst to their enemies and under the cover of darkness, Byzantine divers reportedly plunge into the depths and use ancient tools to sever the heavy chains that attach enemy ships to their anchors. As a testament to the ancient’s physical prowess, they do all that they have to do for about six minutes underwater – all in one breath; no oxygen tanks, safety harnesses and other such gadgets for these ancient SEALs.

All through history, there are other such great warriors and defenders. From the ancients to today, they all share a common bond: bravery and exceptional skills. Some, like today’s Special Forces operatives, are also provided with the latest technology available at that point in time. We still have other such stories of ancient Special Forces to share, so watch out for our succeeding posts.


One Morning in the Life of a NAVY SEAL

Friday, October 24th, 2008

This is an automated news update. It was written on the 23rd of October as we are away at sea wreck diving returning on the 27th.

One Morning in the Life of a NAVY SEAL

It’s three hours after midnight. The sky is moonless by now. The water is warm and crystal-clear by day, but tonight, 20 feet below the surface, it’s pitch black. Some nights we are blessed with comet-like, bright green showers of bioluminescence streaming off the leading edges of our hands as they grasp the attack board, a one-square-foot neutrally buoyant plastic “kickboard” that houses nothing more than a compass, depth gauge and stopwatch. But not tonight. Only pure darkness. Nothing to indicate our movement through the water but the pressure on our fins as we kick out a practiced beat that generates 100 yards every three minutes. Silently, we breathe pure oxygen through a compact, chest-slung re-breather. Not a trace of this two-man SEAL team on the surface.

Each leg of the dive is measured, then broken down into timed segments at a particular compass heading that is corrected for current. The times and bearings are memorized, and the driver of our pair focuses on our 20 foot depth and the compass. Tonight he has it pressed up against his mask to make out the faint glow of the numbers in the darkness. He turns to the next bearing when I squeeze his arm twice just above the elbow. Tonight we are diving into a harbor. There are five legs, the last of which should end with our heads bumping into the hull of a massive warship. Our compass should spin wildly out of control a few seconds before the thump. The steel from the hull drives it crazy, but it is a welcome sign that the target is very near.

On our backs we carry a bomb housed in a round, black, Styrofoam casing that makes it neutral in seawater. It looks like a large, chocolate-frosted birthday cake complete with a candle of sorts. Magnets lace the bottom of the mine. We carefully place it with fingers against the hull, lest the magnets make a deadly clanking noise. Then we light the fuse. The mine gives us an hour and a half before it blows a basketball-size hole in the warship’s engine room. The bomb will snap the shaft just forward of the starboard screw.

We find the engine room by running our fingers along the weld seam, like a long Braille line, from the back of the hull forward along the keel, counting the perpendicular welded intersections that indicate spars. Blueprints of the target have told us how far to go, then whether to turn to port or starboard to find the sweet spot. The mine is placed. The candles are burning. We press our backs flat up against the side of the ship, then push off and try to drift straight out away from the massive magnetic anomaly before we even think about trusting our compass. Then we reverse the headings and times to find our way out of the harbor and back to the sub that waits with its escape hatch light shining like a Motel 6.

BOOM!

Time to get some sleep.


 


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