ENSURING SURVIVABILITY FOR NAVAL SPECIAL WARFARE OPERATIONS IN THE ARCTIC

Naval Special Warfare (NSW) operators are not currently manned, trained, or equipped to effectively survive or execute High Arctic mission sets. The dynamic rate of environmental change and the adversarial exploitation of the Arctic regions have disadvantaged the United States and its allies. This c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Domingo, Steven J., Jr.
Other Authors: Blanken, Leo J., Defense Analysis (DA), Eiriksson, Leif, DIU
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Monterey, CA; Naval Postgraduate School 2022
Subjects:
NSW
COA
DIU
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10945/71450
Description
Summary:Naval Special Warfare (NSW) operators are not currently manned, trained, or equipped to effectively survive or execute High Arctic mission sets. The dynamic rate of environmental change and the adversarial exploitation of the Arctic regions have disadvantaged the United States and its allies. This capstone intends to reduce inherent survival risks an NSW operator would incur associated with extreme “cold” and increase the duration an NSW operator can remain on station in the High Arctic. The end state is to provide NSW with research and a Course of Action (COA) that leads to prototype production, orchestrated through the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU), enabling NSW operators to rapidly respond to crisis/conflict in all Arctic regions. Approved for public release. Distribution is unlimited. Lieutenant, United States Navy