The SEAL’s returned.
In jars.
The families will never know what precisely killed them.
‘Accidents’ covers a lot of mortality causes.
These aren’t SEALs shot down on a combat mission.
To have ordinary GIs and support troops on a no-combat humanitarian mission living in garrison and comfort and among their fellow regular troops and cell phones, and laptops, be exposed, become infected, be isolated and treated, die, and the bodies handled as Ebola bodies after death, is not going to be able to be kept secret.
Even if someone wanted to do so.