U.S. Navy SEALs engage in continuous training to improve and further specialize skills needed to conduct missions from sea, air and land. (U.S. Navy photo.)

The order didn’t mince words — pack and get out, now.

Rumours circulated after the entire Foxtrot platoon of SEAL Team 7, known as Trident 1726 — that’s right, the entire team — was sent home early from Iraq.

Let’s just say, this was an extremely rare move to cut short the mission of a unit that was there to combat remnants of ISIS.

Tight-lipped US Navy officials gave few details, other than to say there was an alleged drinking party and sexual assault that occurred at a Fourth of July barbecue in Iraq in 2019 — Navy rules bar deployed troops from consuming alcohol.

From heroes, to lower than zeroes.

Now, we know what happened … thanks to an excellent detailed report from James Laporta and Julie Watson at Associated Press.

US Navy intelligence specialist Colleen Grace was asleep on a remote air base in Iraq when she was woken up by knocking on the door next to her room, and then a voice she recognized.

The voice belonged to a Navy corpsman she knew. He was upset and speaking loudly to the Army colonel who lived next door. Grace heard the corpsman say that a sailor who attended a Fourth of July barbecue had just been raped by a member of the Navy SEAL platoon on the base. The corpsman asked the colonel what to do because the victim was afraid that if she reported the incident, retribution would follow.

Grace looked down at her phone to check the time and saw a missed text from a friend asking her to come over. “Urgent,” the message read.

When Grace got to her friend’s room around 1:50 a.m., she found her friend in bed with a bruised face and realized she was the person who said she’d been raped. She told Grace that she and the SEAL started out having consensual sex but then he started choking her and at one point she thought “what is he going to do with my body when he kills me?”

Grace photographed her injuries, then hugged her and cried, unsure of what would happen next.

The US Navy SEALs — revered and feared throughout the world — have achieved almost celebrity status for their daring exploits, many of which have been glamorized by Hollywood.

However, the troubling development has added to a growing list of scandals the SEAL community has found itself embroiled in recently that have begun to tarnish the image of the elite fighting force, VOX online reported.

Two members of SEAL Team 6 — the group that killed Osama bin Laden — were implicated in the June 2017 murder of Army Staff Sgt. Logan Melgar along with two other Marine special operators, VOX reported.

And earlier last month, the independent Navy Times reported that six members of SEAL Team 10 tested positive last year for cocaine use and other drugs while serving. 

Clearly, someone had to pay for the July 4th party, and someone did.

Navy heads rolled.

The story of the platoon being pulled from Iraq has been previously reported, but documents obtained by The Associated Press through the Freedom of Information Act and interviews with nearly a dozen people give the first in-depth view into what led to the unprecedented recall.

Records obtained by the AP from the Naval Criminal Investigative Service also reveal a previously unknown reported allegation of sexual misconduct against the SEAL platoon chief, Special Warfare Operator Chief Nicholas Olson, two days before the barbecue.

The platoon was withdrawn after the Navy made an unusually public push to strengthen order and discipline in its secretive elite force amid a series of scandals, AP reported.

The Navy fired three SEAL leaders in the aftermath of the alleged rape and charged an enlisted SEAL with sexual assault, aggravated assault via strangulation and assault by battery for allegedly biting the victim on the face, among other counts. He faces a court-martial in November.

A hearing in the case will be held Friday at Naval Base San Diego, AP reported.

Two days before the Fourth of July barbecue, a military jury in San Diego acquitted Special Warfare Operator Chief Edward Gallagher of murder in the death of a captive Islamic State fighter and attempted murder in the shooting of civilians during a deployment to Iraq in 2017.

“It literally broke my heart because these were people that were my heroes.”

Colleen grace

Gallagher — who was convicted of a single charge for posing with the dead teen militant’s body — got support from President Donald Trump, who prevented the military from taking disciplinary action against the former SEAL, AP reported.

The Fourth of July incident led to a second ethics review of America’s commando forces in a year. The review by the Special Operations Command found a problematic culture that overemphasized combat and put troops at times far from supervision.

The Fourth of July was a holiday and for some of the special operators, there was even more reason to pop open a bottle with the military jury in San Diego acquitting Gallagher, ending a war crimes case that had severely tarnished the commando force’s image, AP reported.

Grace said only two days earlier, one of her friends had knocked on her door crying and said Olson exposed himself to her after they met at a makeshift lounge on Camp Freiwald.

According to a July 16, 2019, report by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, a male, whose name was redacted, met a female on July 2, and during the encounter, he reached into his pants and “exposing his penis,” grabbed her from behind her neck and pulled her toward his groin area.

Despite the redactions, the AP was able to confirm the incident involved Olson and a sailor.

The case was closed after the victim signed a statement on July 13, 2019, saying she did not wish to participate in the investigation. The woman told Grace she was concerned reporting Olson would hurt her career.

Back home, Olson was reprimanded and has since lost his Trident pin, the symbol of his membership in the SEALs. He is appealing the decision, AP reported.

The Navy’s top SEAL, Rear Admiral Collin Green, also fired SEAL Team 7′s commanding officer, Commander Edward Mason, Command Master Chief Hugh Spangler, and Navy SEAL Lieutenant-Commander Luke Im, saying their leadership failures led to a serious breakdown of order and discipline.

Mason and Spangler claimed they were being used as scapegoats and filed a complaint with the Department of Defense Inspector General, but the independent agency said there was insufficient evidence to investigate the firings — another way of saying, we don’t want to get involved.

Grace said she underwent therapy because of what happened in Iraq. She left the Navy in February.

“It literally broke my heart because these were people that were my heroes,” she said of the SEALs.

“It was going to be the highlight of my career, and what do I learn? That these people would rather, you know, have each other’s backs and cover up a sexual assault.”

(Editor’s note: Asia Times would like to apologize for a previous photo on this post which showed heroic Navy SEALs who were not involved in this scandal. This was an editorial mistake which was duly corrected, and we regret the error.)