← All stories
Military

Delta Operator Reveals Special Activities Division Used Female Operators in Denied Areas

Mike Drop · Homeland Security Nearly Compromised My G Squadron Cover · July 3, 2026
Delta Operator Reveals Special Activities Division Used Female Operators in Denied Areas
Mike Drop
Mike Drop
Homeland Security Nearly Compromised My G Squadron Cover
"There's females um operators on the team you know very very fit girls uh very smart. They've been in firefights. They, you know, they're utilized in the unit. Um, and then also work with squadron operators that, you know, at the wrecky level that were handpicked to go to, you know, special activities."
A former Delta Force special activities operator discloses that G Squadron's covert operations in denied areas like Yemen involved female operators working alongside male counterparts under deep cover, often posing as couples or coworkers for commercial companies. He explains females could access areas and extract information from sources that large, tattooed male operators could not, and had proven themselves in combat. This is a rare confirmation of female integration in Delta Force's most sensitive operations during the mid-2000s.

About this episode

A former Green Beret who spent seven years in Delta Force's secretive G Squadron provides unprecedented detail about the unit's special activities operations in denied areas during the height of the War on Terror. The operator, who transitioned from being a Green Beret to serving as a gunner for Delta's fourth squadron, describes the stark operational differences between conventional special forces and Delta operators, calling the latter "the NFL" of military units. He emphasizes their exceptional composure under fire, noting they maintain conversational calm during gunfights without profanity, operating at a speed and precision that far exceeds other elite units. After four years as a gunner, he was selected for G Squadron's special activities division, undergoing eight months of training in technology, surveillance, cover development, and tradecraft to operate covertly in non-declared war zones outside Iraq and Afghanistan. He reveals extensive operations in Yemen and other denied areas where operators worked under deep commercial cover, often for years, building elaborate false identities complete with apartments, credit cards, and backstopped employment. The operator discloses that female Delta operators were integrated into these missions, often working as couples or coworkers to appear less threatening and access areas male operators could not. He describes using advanced surveillance technology, launching drones from hotel rooftops, and working directly with CIA station chiefs to develop intelligence and conduct operations without traditional military support. In a notable security incident, he was detained by Homeland Security at a DC airport after exiting Yemen, requiring activation of his cover story through multiple layers of false companies. The operator concludes by revealing he developed severe opioid addiction beginning in 2005 after an IED injury, which intensified during his transition back to 10th Special Forces Group as a team sergeant, where he helped establish their reconnaissance capability for African operations following the Benghazi attack.

Key takeaways

More stories More from Mike Drop