NONE! They are the best of the best!
Some people think that a Navy Seal Sniper is safer than Navy Seal Infantry. Some people think that Navy Seal Infantry is safer than a Navy Seal Sniper.
I think your question is incomplete. But if you are comparing a person who has only been to army basic training and a trained navy SEAL. The answer is obvious. If you want to open the box of worms ask who is better trained a Navy SEAL or an Army Ranger or Special Forces.
Uncorrected vision can be no worse than 20/200 in each eye. Both eyes must be correctable to 20/20.
3 weeks for Indoc (Indoctrination)24 weeks for BUD/S (Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL) training in Coronado, California5 weeks for Parachute training in San Diego, California16 weeks of SQT (SEAL Qualification Training)It takes roughly around two years of training before a Navy SEAL actually goes into combat.
SEAL team six is an elite force with the hardest training in the world. Before they were exposed, the government vowed to not reveal them to the public, they are more protected than regular SEAL teams.
No, they just have different jobs.
No SAS is the Best
If you put a Navy Seal in the ring the UFC fighter is better. If you put the UFC fighter on the battlefield the Navy Seal is better... WAY better.
you can be a Navy SEAL from age 20 to 30 and on the website i found this at they said you could be a little older than 30, good luck
Atleast more than 100,000$ a year.
Considering that the marines are always the first to respond, they may be considered better in recon then the navy in general. However, the navy SEAL's may be considered better than the marines in genreal since the SEAL's are special ops.
It depends on how far you've advanced in training, and what your Navy rate is; DOR's (Drop On Request) can be initiated by the candidate at any time during BUD/S training; not everyone who successfully passes Basic Underwater Demolition will necessarily pass SEAL training as well. If the candidate passed BUD but not SEAL training, they'll have an option for joining one of the UDT teams. However, most DOR's are during initial BUD/S training, and as such, when the member is dropped, they are returned to their previous status (rate/rank) for reassignment as deemed appropriate by the force detailers. Being dropped isn't a bad mark on your record by any means; the Navy recognizes that the percentage of candidates who successfully become SEAL's is extremely low. The options today are far better than they used to be years ago; for many years, only those in non-technical rates could apply for SEAL training, of which there aren't many in the Navy now, or then. Typically MS's, YN's, GM's, BM's, etc., applied, and if you didn't make it, you couldn't apply for a more technical rate. Today, any rate can apply, technical or not, giving the candidate better career options if they don't pass.