45yrold_newbie:However I'm not sure I make the connection that you are trying to explain. How would a civilian agency let alone a dive op know what a navy dive card qualifies you for? C-cards at least list the qualification level of a diver (AOW-EAN-Master-etc).
What I'm saying is everyone knows how much more demanding military training is than civilian training. Yet with all the training listed below, military divers are now qualified, by recreational world standards, to go on even the simplest dive to go look at fish. UNLESS you PAY for the right to do so by getting the recreational cards.
Meeting someone for the first time for a dive I would trust a military diver much more than any recreational certified diver. I know the quality of training they went through. They are trained by a team of instructors not just one. People are either proficient in the skills or they are out. They dont get a chance to improve them later if youre not proficient to begin with.
To reach Master is several years of continuing education. Not 5 specialties and 50 dives. But even they are not quailifed to go look at fish.

Gary D.
Second Class Diver
Second Class Divers are trained in SCUBA, Surface Supplied (Air/Mixed Gas), and Closed Circuit diving rigs to perform submarine lockouts, underwater maintenance, propeller changes, hull repair on ships and submarines, and search and salvage operations in depths up to 300 feet. They are trained in chamber operations and the use of munitions plus mechanical and chemical cutting equipment for salvage, battle damage repair, and underwater construction projects.
First Class Diver
First Class Divers perform planning for SCUBA, Surface Supplied (Air/Mixed Gas), Closed Circuit, and saturation diving operations on submarine lock-outs, underwater maintenance, propeller changes, hull repair on ships and submarines, and search and salvage operations in depths up to 1,000 feet. They perform and supervise chamber operations and the use of munitions plus mechanical and chemical cutting equipment for salvage, battle damage repair, and underwater construction projects.
Master Diver
The militarys highest qualified diver, the Master Diver manages dive programs for Navy and Marine Corps commands. As subject matter expert in diving, salvage, and underwater ship repair, the Master Diver works directly for Commanding Officers in formulating and executing dive programs and operations, executes salvage plans for Engineering Officers during salvage operations, and controls underwater repair of Naval vessels.
The Schools
After completion of Recruit Training or acceptance in the Navy Diver program from the Fleet, individuals will go to Naval Training Command, Great Lakes, for Diver Preparation Course (32 training days, including 20 days of Basic Electrical and Engineering courses). Upon completion of the training, candidates will go to NDSTC Panama City, Fla., for Second Class Dive School, which is 70 training days long. The NDSTC is divided into Fleet and specialized sections. Regardless of their section, all candidates are taught:
Basic gas laws as they relate to diving
Diving medicine
Recompression chamber operations
Dive planning
Diving physics
Salvage operations
Surface-supplied diving systems
Use of all Diving apparatus: Open- and Closed-Circuit rigs
Underwater mechanics and tools, and underwater cutting and welding