Nov
09

7 Navy SEALs punished for consulting on video game

A group of U.S. Navy SEALS have been disciplined for allegedly revealing secrets when they worked as paid consultants on the video game "Medal of Honor: Warfighters." David Martin reports.









Seven members of the secretive Navy SEAL Team 6, including one involved in the mission to get Osama bin Laden, have been punished for disclosing classified information, senior Navy officials said.

The seven received letters of reprimand and forfeited half of their pay for two months after a Navy investigation found they had served as paid consultants to the designers of “Medal of Honor Warfighter,” one official said.

All are members of Seal Team Six, the secretive commando unit based in Virginia. Members of the unit conducted the operation against bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in May 2011.








Four others SEALs, all based on the West Coast, are also under investigation for allegedly disclosing classified information, the official said.

“We do not tolerate deviations from the policies that govern who we are and what we do as sailors,” Rear Adm. Gary Bonelli, deputy commander of the Naval Special Warfare Command, said in a statement.

“The non-judicial punishment decisions made today send a clear message throughout our force that we are and will be held to a high standard of accountability,” he added.

The video game was released last month by Electronic Arts of Redwood City, Calif. The company asserted in promotional materials that it was “written by actual U.S. Tier 1 Operators while deployed overseas” and that it provides “players a view into globally recognized threats ... letting them experience the action as it might have unfolded.”

A Tier I Operator is a military term for a commando involved in the most sensitive operations.

The reprimands given to the seven SEALs, which were first reported by CBS News, are a step below a court martial, but will likely force them out of the commando unit and possibly end their military careers.

“It essentially makes it hard for them to continue as SEALs,” a senior official said.

Pentagon officials refused to discuss the nature of the classified information, but the incident comes at a time of heightened scrutiny of alleged leaks of classified material involving the SEALs.

The issue first emerged last year when critics charged that the Obama White House had improperly disclosed details about the bin Laden raid for political gain.

Then, this fall, Pentagon officials expressed their concerns after publication of “No Easy Day,” a first-person account of the bin Laden operation by another member of SEAL Team Six, Matt Bissonnette. He wrote the book under the pseudonym Mark Owen.

Pentagon officials say Bissonnette’s book, a best-seller, contains classified information. They have accused him of violating nondisclosure agreements in publishing the book without submitting it for a security review. They have not taken formal action against him but officials say they are weighing various legal steps.

The SEAL mission to capture or kill Laden, while stunningly successful, encountered a number of unexpected obstacles, including the loss of a stealthy helicopter that was partially blown up by the SEALs after making a hard landing inside bin Laden's compound.

The head of Naval Special Warfare Command, Rear Adm. Sean Pybus, responded to the Bissonnette book by telling his force that "hawking details about a mission" and selling other information about SEAL training and operations puts the force and their families at risk.

SEALs, both active duty and retired, possess highly sensitive information about tactics and techniques that are central to the success of their secret and often dangerous missions overseas. That is why they are obliged to sign nondisclosure agreements when they enter service and when they leave, and it is why the Pentagon seeks to enforce such written agreements.

The punishments were first reported by CBS News.

David S. Cloud and Associated Press contributed





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