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Navy SEAL Dog Kills Enemy Combatant in Afghanistan During Daytime Operation

Mike Drop · From SEAL Team 10 to DEVGRU - Cole Fackler Speaks Out · July 13, 2026
Navy SEAL Dog Kills Enemy Combatant in Afghanistan During Daytime Operation
Mike Drop
Mike Drop
From SEAL Team 10 to DEVGRU - Cole Fackler Speaks Out
"The easiest way to describe is that it looked like, you know how great whites flip up seals? It looked like the dog was doing that with the body. Hit him on the inside of the leg and then chewed on his neck. It got to a point where they had to neutralize the threat because it was going to become damaging to the dog in the sense of him hurting the dog."
A SEAL Team 10 operator describes a combat incident where a military working dog independently killed an enemy combatant weighing approximately 150 pounds during a daytime gunfight. The dog attacked the target's leg and neck with such violence that operators had to intervene to prevent the enemy from injuring the dog. The operator compared the dog's attack pattern to a great white shark attacking seals.

About this episode

A former Navy SEAL Team Six operator provides rare insight into both conventional SEAL Team operations and the elite Development Group selection process in this detailed interview. The operator, who served with SEAL Team 10 before successfully completing Green Team selection, reveals that approximately 80 percent of candidates fail to make it into SEAL Team Six, describing the psychological pressure as exponentially more intense than BUD/S training. He recounts his first combat kill at SEAL Team 10, a moving headshot at 50 yards at night that he attributes to skeet shooting training with his father, and describes witnessing a military working dog kill an enemy combatant with such violence that operators had to intervene to protect the animal. The conversation covers the integration of military working dogs into SEAL operations beginning in 2007-2008, including their use for explosive detection and target apprehension. The operator discusses his personal journey through multiple deployments, two failed marriages, and the decision to leave a leadership position at Team 10 to attempt Green Team selection, knowing failure would mean returning to his old team. He describes the Development Group as embodying everything aspiring SEALs dream about, with camaraderie and operational tempo that exceeds conventional teams tenfold. The interview also reveals details about the ceremonial acceptance process after completing a probationary period at the unit, which the operator describes as emotionally powerful and steeped in tradition. He emphasizes that even after making it through selection, approximately 10 percent of new operators are eventually removed for performance or behavioral issues, and that veteran operators can be terminated regardless of tenure if they fail to maintain standards.

Key takeaways

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