Days after the Fox News network announced it would broadcast a documentary with a commando who claims to have shot Osama bin Laden, Rear Admiral Brian Losey, the head of Naval Special Warfare Command, wrote to his troops denouncing anyone who seeks fame or fortune by revealing details of secret missions.
"A critical tenet of our Ethos is 'I do not advertise the nature of my work, nor seek recognition for my actions,'" Losey and the top enlisted sailor, Force Master Chief Michael Magaraci, wrote in the letter, obtained by AFP yesterday.
The strict code of humble anonymity represented a "life-long commitment and obligation" and those who flouted it were no longer teammates "in good standing," it said.
The commander warned in the letter that "we will actively seek judicial consequence for members who wilfully violate the law" by revealing classified information.
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The documentary titled "The Man Who Killed Usama Bin Laden" is due to air this month. Fox News said it had no plans to cancel the program.
The Pentagon could not confirm if the commando identified in the documentary took part in the May 2011 raid but said all troops are legally bound by non-disclosure agreements promising never to discuss classified information, even after they retire from the military.
"If in fact this individual was associated with the military unit that carried out the UBL (Osama bin Laden) raid, which is yet to be determined, he is still bound by his Non-Disclosure Agreement to not discuss classified information, especially in a nationally televised interview," spokesperson Commander Amy Derrick-Frost said in an email.
Another Navy SEAL who was part of the team that carried out the May 2011 raid on Bin Laden's Pakistani compound, Matt Bissonnette, ran into trouble by publishing a memoir without submitting it to the Pentagon for review beforehand.