At a glance, Navy SEALs don't appear to use radically different weapons than conventional infantry units. The difference is not the rifle or the optic, but how those weapons are trained and judged under pressure. SEAL missions rarely allow clean sight pictures or predictable engagements, and their training reflects that reality. Here, 24/7 Wall St. is taking a closer look at how Navy SEAL weapons training differs from conventional infantry.
Combat rarely unfolds as a sequence of clean, deliberate actions. For Navy SEALs, engagements are defined by seconds-long windows where decisions about movement, fire, and restraint must be made instantly and under extreme pressure. These choices are not improvised in the moment, but trained relentlessly until judgment becomes automatic. Here, 24/7 Wall St. is taking a closer look at the split-second decisions that Navy SEALs have to make.
Long-range marksmanship is one of the most demanding skills in the SEAL arsenal, and the rifle a sniper brings to the fight can ultimately shape the mission itself. Whether the job is counterterrorism, overwatch, or disabling enemy hardware from afar, certain rifles have proven themselves as invaluable over the years and earned a highly favored place in the Navy SEAL toolbox. Here 24/7 Wall St. is taking a closer look at the long-range weapons that SEALs prefer to use..
The Accuracy International Mk 13 sniper rifle is one of the newer additions to the Navy SEAL toolbox. It combines an old-school sniper tradition with modern bolt-action hardware that gives SEAL snipers extended range and improved firepower. In practice it's not necessarily about bigger guns so much as better ballistics, modular barrels and advanced optics. The versatility of this anti-personnel rifle is the key.
Thinking of the long-term impact of a military career, I realized that 20-plus years as a SEAL could mean serious bodily injuries and strained personal relationships. I couldnât afford to go down that path.