Green Berets Earn Blue Stars After Debris Removal Off Key West

Share this
Blue Star dive operators joined Army Special Forces for the clean-up effort. Activity conducted under permit number FKNMS-2021-021

The U.S. Army’s Green Berets are known as the most specialized experts in unconventional warfare.  This week in waters off Key West, they took part in an unconventional assignment, removing more than 1,200 pounds of debris in waters where they train.

The clean-up was organized under Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary’s Goal: Clean Seas Florida Keys and its Blue Star Dive program, which provides grants to local dive operators to safely remove marine debris. 

“Our students do numerous dives throughout the year in that specific training area and we were able to clean it up,” said CW2 Nate Tiffany, who one day earlier graduated 32 special forces from their basic and advanced combat dive courses.  “Not only does it help us safety wise for dives in that area but it helps divers in Key West in general and we were able to do this alongside our NOAA brethren.”

Since the 1960’s Key West has been home to the U.S. Army’s only Special Forces Underwater Operations School.  Last summer, a contractor looking for Civil War munitions mapped seafloor from Ft. Taylor to the reef, uncovering potentially dangerous materials where SFUWO divers navigate during nighttime underwater training.  It was a perfect opportunity to pair Green Berets with the sanctuary’s Blue Star program, which is ultimately a division of NOAA.

“Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary educates Blue Star dive operators on best practices for debris removal and over 50,000 pounds have been retrieved from Keys’ waters to date,” said Sara Rankin, local chapter director for National Marine Sanctuary Foundation which funds the program.  “Pairing Blue Star divers with U.S. Army Special Forces and the U.S. Coast Guard is the most genuine representation of how a community-led program flourishes. It was a great day for our community above and below the water.”The divers worked two locations off Truman Annex, bringing to the surface an array of cables and pipes for safe disposal.  “It’s very important for us to be able to participate in protecting the resource that not only protects our living but to save it for our grandchildren,” said Bob Holston of Dive Key West and a past director on the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation board.  “What we want to do is get these operators and their customers involved.  They look at the reef and it’s prettier to them than most things they’ve seen.  But they haven’t seen what it looked like 50 years ago.” 

U.S. Coast Guard personnel collaborated in the project.  Activity conducted under permit number FKNMS-2021-021.
U.S. Coast Guard personnel collaborated in the project. Activity conducted under permit number FKNMS-2021-021.

The National Marine Sanctuary Foundation, established in 2000, is the official non-profit partner of the National Marine Sanctuary System. The Foundation directly supports America’s national marine sanctuaries through our mission to protect species, conserve ecosystems and preserve America’s maritime heritage. We accomplish our mission through community stewardship and engagement programs, on-the-water conservation projects, public education and outreach programs, and scientific research and exploration. The Foundation fosters innovative projects that are solution-oriented, scalable and transferable, and develop strategic partnerships that promote the conservation and recovery of species and their habitats. Learn more at marinesanctuary.org.

Designated on November 16, 1990, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary is one of the marine protected areas that make up the National Marine Sanctuary System. Administered by NOAA and jointly managed with the State of Florida, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary protects 3,800 square miles of waters surrounding the Florida Keys. Within the boundaries of the sanctuary lie spectacular, unique, and nationally significant marine resources including North America’s only coral barrier reef, extensive seagrass beds, mangrove-fringed islands, more than 6,000 species of marine life, and archeological treasures.


This piece was prepared online by Panuruji Kenta, Publisher, SEVENSEAS Media