Thai Navy SEALs Successfully Rescue 12 Youth Soccer Players From Flooded Cave

Disaster has been averted in Thailand thanks to a daring rescue mission that produced amazingly successful results.

All 12 members of a boys soccer team and their coach now have been safely rescued from a cave in Thailand after being trapped there for 18 days, the Thai Navy SEALs announced Tuesday morning in a Facebook post.

“We are not sure if this is a miracle, a science, or what. All the thirteen Wild Boars are now out of the cave,” the post read.

The group was exploring the Tham Luang Cave after a June 23 practice when monsoon rains flooded the cave and blocked their exit.

What followed was a massive search-and-rescue operation involving hundreds of divers and volunteers, who finally spotted the boys and their coach 10 days after they went missing. A team of Thai and international divers extracted eight of the boys Sunday and Monday using a complex system that involved laying out oxygen canisters at regular intervals to guide them out of the flooded cave.

The remaining four boys and the 25-year-old head coach were rescued around Tuesday afternoon local time and were taken to a local hospital.

The rescue mission wasn’t without tragedy: A retired Thai Navy SEAL officer, identified as 38-year-old Saman Gunan, died while placing oxygen canisters along the escape route after he ran out of air.

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The Thai Navy SEALs said they still were waiting on four SEAL personnel to come out of the cave after they stayed with the boys on a dry shelf inside the flooded cave.

UPDATE (10:58 a.m. ET): The remaining four SEAL personnel have exited the cave safely, according to CNN.