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by A_Person 2907 days ago
You can't be serious. Taking 13 people, with an absolute maximum of Open Water level training (if that), back out through hundreds (or thousands?) of meters of low or zero visibility diving, including (apparently) tight restrictions, without risking the lives of all concerned? Aint gonna happen - unless the water level drops to the point where they can just float back out.
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What I don't understand is that surely there must be a wide enough passage for them to have got in in the first place. It may be flooded but if one can walk into them vertically, surely they should be fairly accessible to a diver horizontally. Can't they just follow / be attached to a string or something like that?
My wife and I were doing a dive under very controlled circumstances. My wife tried to swim through a circular opening wider than your outspread arms. She couldn't. Fighting panic (rule 2: dont panic!) She kept trying, growing ever more aware of being both underwater and underground.

Then our dive master reached out and pushed her down a foot, and suddenly her tank could clear the top. From her perspective she kept swimming lower, but that was counteracted by buoyancy and she couldn't tell, with every failed attempt reducing her mental capacity to figure it out.

Fight or flight is not the reflex we need in diving, but it is the reflex we have.

It's a 2.5 km (a bit less than 2 miles) underwater swim. Right now they've been without food for 10 days and are barely able to stand. At the moment they wouldn't be able to walk the distance, much less spend many hours (it was about four hours for the experienced divers, so more for the boys) swimming underwater in unpredictable currents with no visibility due to silt, so if they get confused and let go of the string for a moment in those hours then they die.

As one of the rescuers said, "When it starts raining the flow is so hard you can barely swim against it." - and that's a pro diver, imagine how would it be for a boy who didn't even know how to swim and thus doesn't have the relevant muscles trained. It's also narrow enough so that only one person can fit through, so you can't have the divers guide them by hand, only accompany them behind them.

”only accompany them behind them”

I think they would have them tied to a rope between divers, so that one of them can pull (gently, in narrow areas) and the other can guide the package to prevent it from scratching the rocks.

Fortunately the current is in the direction that they need to go to get out.
Not really - from the plan (https://www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2018/jul/03...) it seems that it's about 50/50; first they need to go ~700m against the current and only then ~800m with the current.
Why hasn't food been delivered?
The food has been delivered after they found the group.
It's not logically following to me that just because it's easy to walk through a place it must necessarily be easy to dive through it. Diving is always significantly harder (you're wearing bulkier equipment for starters). It costs more energy to swim through water than it does to walk through air, the water has currents which you have to fight against, and the waters are murky so you have to go slow and can easily get disoriented.
You have those small engines/jets/scooters for divers, so exhaustion from swimming should not be a problem, right? They also can place long glowing ropes in murky water; it's been done all the time in caves (or bind them to scuba divers, one in front, one in the back of a group). Once those boys get proper proteins/water and wait for a day or two to recover, they should be able to work it out, unless rain picks up - they are old enough to be considered adults in some Asian cultures, perfect age for an adventure of lifetime. But then even their current position is under danger as it could be flooded further or if a large flash flood occurs, then all bets are off.
I'm no expert but I don't believe those diving jets are going to help in such an environment because A) takes up space of which they most likely don't have and B) it kicks up a lot of silt and dirt, making visibility conditions terrible. This can make or break such a rescue attempt and be really dangerous even for a seasoned cave diver.
Note that the article states:

> Narongsak explained that the divers had fixed rope lines along the passageway and distributed oxygen tanks along their route, allowing them to advance through the exceptionally narrow passageway unencumbered by bulky equipment.

The (extremely skilled) divers aren't wearing tanks due to how narrow some parts of the passage are. Using a thruster in a cramped environment is not a silver bullet.

I don't know that cave at all, but from various descriptions, it sounds like they may have had to crawl through several restrictions to get where they are. So it's not a matter of walking through vertically to get in, then just being gently pulled back out the same way It's a matter of squeezing through on your belly to get in - then to get out, reversing that, in unfamiliar bulky diving gear, completely underwater (literally no air anywhere), in pitch blackness, and zero visibility (as in, you'd not see an inch beyond your mask, even with a powerful torch). It's not easy even for experienced cave divers. I once went through a hole, then couldn't get back out! I tried for 10 minutes. At one point I even considered removing my tanks and pushing them out first. It eventually happened, but it gave me a scare - and that was in crystal clear water, in a site I'd dived before! Its just not as simple as people seem to assume. But again, I don't know the cave in question, I'm just going from what I've read.
Think about thin vertical passages. You can talk trough them easily but diving would be very difficult.

I know nothing about that cave, but passages between caves can be connected by tight restrictions. They might have crawled they way up. And now that restriction is flooded.

Add a bunch of regulator hoses, fins, air supply etc to someone not used to having them attached and the gap needs to be huge to not snare a hose and rip a full face mask off.

Even a semi experienced diver is far less aware of all their apparatus than a human who has been crawling around things since birth

Current and silt, I imagine