None
VERY VERY few, because Navy SEAL snipers are always hidden. Even when they move, they are either in gillie suites or they move when no one is around or by the shadows, Navy SEAL snipers never get compromised unless they miss, which is almost never.
NOT THAT MUCH MOST OF THEM HIDE A LOT IF YOU ASK ME TO BE A SNIPER YOU NEED TO HAVE 20/20 vision and you have to serve in the army as something else before you can become a sniper you cant just go there and say i want to train to be a sniper because i want to be a sniper and if you meant snipers out of the army i would not no
too long :[
in 2011(this year) US Navy Seals killed him on May 1st.
Around 2,450 to 2,000 they make up 1% of the Navy.
alot
It is a sad and painful statement of facts, but there are many who have been in Seals have never been deployed on an actual combat mission. With all of their training and all of the skills and motivation they bring to the covert battlefield, they were simply in the wrong place when the mission was ordered. They represent a valuable asset that will not be squandered lightly on a mission that is ill suited for men of their talent. They curse their luck and continue to train.
1-3 each year
potchers killl them
1-3 each year
hundred of thousands each year
all of them
Though the SEAL's had their beginnings in WWII and more formal beginnings in 1961, the Navy SEAL teams were officially established in 1962 by President Kennedy. Most of the first SEAL teams were comprised of members from UDT units.
1-3 a year Weddell seals can have 1 -2 pups, as this species can give birth to twin pups.