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Former SEAL Exposes Navy Medical Bureaucracy That Let Him Deploy Five Times With Non-Deployable Waiver

Shawn Ryan Show · #313 Eric Frohardt - DEVGRU Gold Squadron Sniper and Assaulter · June 15, 2026
Former SEAL Exposes Navy Medical Bureaucracy That Let Him Deploy Five Times With Non-Deployable Waiver
Shawn Ryan Show
Shawn Ryan Show
#313 Eric Frohardt - DEVGRU Gold Squadron Sniper and Assaulter
"I had lost my kidney and I signed a waiver to stay in the military. I didn't know that that was a non-deployable waiver. I immediately deployed right after it. I did 4 more at DEVGRU. It wasn't until I got hurt in combat that the Bureau of Navy Medicine found out because they had to sign off on my Purple Heart. The Bureau of Navy Medicine shows up at DEVGRU and says, where is this Froehart? He signed a waiver to stay in under the caveat that he couldn't deploy. And I just kept going."
Froehart revealed that after losing his kidney in 2002, he signed a waiver while heavily medicated not realizing it barred him from deploying. He went on five combat deployments to DEVGRU over seven years before Navy Medicine discovered the error when approving his Purple Heart paperwork. The bureaucratic disconnect allowed him to conduct his entire DEVGRU career in violation of medical regulations that should have grounded him immediately after his kidney removal.

About this episode

On this episode of the Sean Ryan Show, host Sean Ryan sat down with Eric Froehart, a former Navy SEAL who served nearly 12 years including multiple combat deployments with SEAL Team 5 and Naval Special Warfare Development Group (DEVGRU). The conversation centered on Froehart's unconventional path from an Iowa hog farm to elite special operations, and the catastrophic combat experiences that defined his service. Froehart revealed that a bureaucratic error allowed him to deploy five times to DEVGRU despite signing a non-deployable medical waiver after losing his kidney in 2002, a mistake discovered only when Navy Medicine reviewed his Purple Heart paperwork. The interview's most gripping moments came when Froehart described a devastating sequence of combat losses in Iraq during 2008, including a Super Bowl Sunday mission where he survived close-range gunfights with multiple suicide bombers, followed two nights later by a massive house-borne IED that killed teammate Louis Safran and catastrophically wounded his entire assault team. Froehart detailed how the blast's overpressure threw him 30 feet from the building while teammates suffered crushing injuries, compound fractures, and death. Beyond combat, Froehart discussed his unconventional SEAL career challenges including going through Hell Week with an undiagnosed kidney stone that doctors treated with laxatives, climbing El Capitan on just his 10th day wearing a climbing harness, and his post-service struggles with identity and purpose. The episode concluded with Froehart's transformation into a committed Christian who now credits daily prayer and Bible study with providing more clarity and energy than any physical training regimen, expressing deep regret for not sharing his faith with teammates who died in combat.

Key takeaways

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