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CNN-It took two years to kill Osama bin Laden, a part of foreign aid workers in the United States and Denmark, a unit that rescued the same elite SEALs in Somalia at night, a US official said on Wednesday.

It is attached to the Navy Special Operations Development Group, also known as DEVGRU, and it is part of the joint special operations forces to rescue hostages. CNN has confirmed this. DEVGRU, officially named Seal Team 6, is one of the legendary fighting forces composed of several units.

SEALs parachuted into Somalia on Tuesday from a fixed-wing plane and advanced walk to a hostage compound, US officials said.

Nine gunmen were killed in the strike, the US military said. There are conflicting reports of the number of wounded.

The seal and the release of hostages remained in the helicopter. An American official said that he had no right to speak, and the media and who did not want to be named.

The hostages Jessica Buchanan and Paul Zistetz, who were kidnapped in October, visited a humanitarian project in northern Somalia, according to the Danish Refugee Council who hired them.

Buchanan and Tsistez are safe and sound, aid groups say.

Animation depicts Somali rescue

"It just needs your breath, their ability and their courage and their incredible timing," Vice President Biden said on Wednesday morning, referring to the unit's ability.

SEALS: We never give up and always win

The US Navy SEALs evolved from several specialized Navy SEALs and entered World War II when the United States realized that in North Africa, Europe and the Pacific Ocean, invading enemy territory, it needed savvy and quick-thinking soldiers who could perform reconnaissance at sea.

In addition to tactical expertise, SEALs-referred to as sea, air and land teams-need extraordinary physical strength.

Kenya praised rescuers for their industry-wide skills in rescuing

jacks, and being able to investigate the railway tunnels and bridges along the coast of China Yangtze River, which were demolished by China citizens in 1945 or during the Korean War.

The nickname SEAL follows President Kennedy's talk about his admiration for special forces soldiers and his hope that the US military can better improve its ability to engage in unconventional wars, combat guerrillas and covert operations.

The participants had a new and urgent need for more advanced military technology at that time. In other missions, SEALs were deployed as consultants and trained South Vietnamese SEALs.

Rescuers Rescue Somalia

US special forces rescue Somali aid workers

Vietnam was the first American war in which television and other media were widely broadcast and woven into mainstream consumer pop culture. It solidified SEAL's image as the ultimate tough guy, and was well-known by SEALs for their ability to "do face-to-face combat and report stories about Vietnam and its work with the CIA".

The relationship between American spy agencies and their elite troops is crucial to obtain real-time intelligence, sometimes carrying out last-minute missions-perhaps a more important asset now than ever, experts say. The war against al-Qaeda is as much about obtaining reliable information as it is about winning the battlefield.

SEAL won a lot. During the Vietnam War, they carried out a covert operation called Project Phoenix, which captured sympathizers in Vietnam.

during the Iran-Iraq war, the task of SEALs was to mine boats against Iran. The first flag officer set foot in Afghanistan after September 11, 21, and was the seal in charge of all special operations against the Central Command, according to the SEAL history page on its website.

According to the website, SEALs command Task Force K- BAR and are responsible for supervising the navy, air force and joint special operations forces at the beginning of Operation Enduring Freedom. They carried out more than 75 special reconnaissance and direct action missions, destroyed more than 5, pounds of explosives and weapons, identified enemy personnel, and conducted operations to search for terrorists trying to escape from the country by sea.

The largest deployment of SEALs in the history of the group came in the Iraq war, and the tasks commanded by SEALs included ensuring all the offshore natural gas and the southern oil infrastructure of the oil terminal on the Fao Peninsula, and clearing key waterways so that aid could flow into the country. The targets of several high-value terrorists were captured by SEALs, including Ahmed Hashim Abid, four alleged masterminds of the murder and dismemberment of Blackwater Fallujah in 24.

Another high-profile mission came in 29, when SEALs rescued the cargo ship Maersk Alabama, the captain of the United States who had been hijacked Somali pirates off the coast of Somalia. SEAL sniper was on the deck of the ship, fired three times at the same time, and hit three pirates who were holding the captain.

Of course, bin Laden killed a seal at a golden moment in the operation in Abbottabad, Pakistan in 211.

But not long after the victory, when the SEALs suffered the loss of 17 members, Wardak province, where their helicopter was shot down, intended to take out a known Taliban leader to directly take charge of the attack on American troops. Two American military officials told CNN about the August incident shortly after that. The troops were called in to help another unit contain the ground in the crossfire. Overall, 38 people died in the accident.

SEAL training is "the ultimate test of a man," said Chris Heben, a former SEAL with 1 years' experience in missions in Africa, the Middle East and Afghanistan.

It promotes soldiers' mental, physical and psychological tests and how they can work with others with great pressure and pain.

SEALs have been training for 18 to 24 months. During the training period, the trainees were constantly cold, hungry, sleep deprived and wet for five days. Instructors deprived the participants of sleep, and then let them fight for a long enough REM sleep to begin, said Brandon Taylor Weber, a former seal who ran as a sniper in the Navy Special Operations Command, was part of combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The teacher kept shouting, "Come on, quit, if you like!"

a lot of doing. The attrition rate of SEAL training is about 9%, Heben and Webb said.

Most of the long recruits dropped out of hell week ago because they couldn't take training, which included swimming in open water with a distance of 24 kilometers and a breakthrough of 2 miles. Weber said.

"Every day is like climbing Mount Everest," Heben said. "What do you continue to do in front of you, you don't look up."

Training lecturers makes you feel that "you are part of an Indian tribe," Heben said.

"There are many slaps and verbal reinforcement. You feel part of your things while you are doing great things, but they definitely let you know when you are not doing the right thing. "

Heben, who has a strong and satisfactory discipline from the Navy SEALs, is in his early twenties. He didn't go to college, although he was very bright, he spent more time working than his classroom homework. He has got ants in his pants.

four walls and books are not his business. Despite his humble achievements, at the age of 23, he found a job at HOME MORTGAGESmaking for $63, a year.

Then one day, he read an article by the popular mechanic SEAL.

"I'll join the navy at once," Heben said. "I asked the recruiter," What is the fastest track to become a SEAL? I took it.

Although he won't discuss the specific areas of the country where he carries out the task, he said that he usually trains the specific physical model for the target position of the task.