A former US Navy SEAL who went AWOL in 2019 was killed this week in Ukraine, US officials said on Friday.
They said he was not fighting in an official capacity.
Daniel Swift, who was a first-class petty officer, was injured in Dnipro and died of his wounds, said one of the officials, who all spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss personnel issues.
Photo: AP
No other details were available, including whether Swift’s body has been taken out of Ukraine.
The navy said he deserted his post in San Diego, California, in March 2019.
“We cannot speculate as to why the former Sailor was in Ukraine,” the navy said.
At least five other Americans are known to have died fighting in Ukraine, according to US Department of State statements and reports from individual families.
Swift joined the navy in 2005 and was assigned to a SEAL unit in 2007. He voluntarily left the service in January 2014, but rejoined in 2015, and was assigned to a SEAL unit a year later. After he deserted, US Naval Special Warfare Command stripped him of his SEAL qualification — essentially revoking the trident SEALs wear.
Swift also worked briefly — just more than three months in 2015 — as a police officer in Medford, Oregon.
Medford Police Department Deputy Chief Trevor Arnold had no further information on Friday.
He wrote a book in 2020 called The Fall of a Man. Its Amazon page says he became a father at age 20 and “by the time he was thirty he had deployed as a Navy SEAL five times to include Iraq, Afghanistan and Yemen.” It adds that he had four children.
The US government has discouraged Americans from going to fight for Ukraine, citing concerns that they might be captured by Russian forces and held hostage. At least 6,000 people contacted the Ukrainian embassy in Washington during the opening weeks of the war seeking information about how to volunteer on behalf of Ukraine.
Half the potential volunteers were quickly rejected for lacking military experience, having a criminal record, or otherwise not being fit to serve, Ukraine’s military attache said last year.
An unknown number of Americans have joined units of foreign fighters supporting Kyiv, including former military members. Others are volunteering with aid groups and human rights organizations.
The administration of US President Joe Biden has made it clear that no current US service members are in combat in Ukraine, although there are some assigned to the embassy in Kyiv, including for security and with the defense attache’s office.
The state department declined to address Swift’s death specifically, but said in a statement that it could confirm the recent death of a US citizen in Ukraine.
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