klr wrote:Yes ... sort of. According to other some other articles, they were in the Territorial Army - reservists in other words. So that rules some kind of ultra-tough special forces training.
Why wasn't anyone on hand to keep an eye on their condition? Or more likely, why did they not do it properly?
Isn't this where SAS has Selection?
Even if it had nothing to do with special forces, a lot of military training is designed to reduce soldiers to quivering babbling masses of misery and exhaustion, then build them back up "in the proper mold".
It sort of sounds like these soldiers not only were not acclimated, but they hid danger signs of dehydration and electrolyte thresholds from those watching, which is quite common in military training.
You never really know what you're capable of until you're put in a position to see. It sounds like these guys volunteered for this and expected to be stretched to the breaking point, and didn't recognize the signs of real problems. Or didn't want to let themselves and their mates down. Or were beyond the point where they could make good decisions.
Last year in my hometown of Seward, Ak, a 65 year-old competitor in the Mt Marathon Race never came down the 3022' (921m) hill after being seen near the top of the brutal sufferfest. He's listed as "Dead", but they never found his corpse.
Another year, a hot race day, an elite mountain runner who had won the race previously passed smooth-the-fuck out in the race
lead and skidded on his chin on 4th Avenue, 15 yards from the finish line. This after he had run up 3.1 miles in 37 minutes, and took less than 8 minutes coming down...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/0 ... 46055.html