US Navy SEALs
World War II
By the time of the American involvement in WWII, Hitler and his axis forces had bitten off a large portion of Europe, Asia and North Africa. If the Allied forces were to stand a chance, there would have to be several full scale landings. The need for timely and complete intelligence of the landing beaches was recognized during World War I, following a disastrous landing on the beach of Gallipoli, which was aborted after 30,000 troops landed only to find the terrain forbidding. The US Navy decided that to do the job right required sending in their own. Brave men were needed to reconnoiter the landing beaches, take note of obstacles and defenses and ultimately guide the landing forces in. Later in the war they inherited the job of demolitions from the Army Engineers in order to clear any obstacles and/or defenses in the near shore area. Beginning a tradition that continues today, these brave men contributed immensely to the war effort.
The Scouts and Raiders began training at Fort Pierce, Florida in May of1942. It took daring men to survey the enemy territory in small boats and relay the necessary information back to command. At times the Scouts went ashore to gather sand and soil samples to determine if Marine Amtracs and Tanks being used would be effective at the proposed landing site. They then returned to guide the amphibious forces to the proper site. The Scouts and Raiders were the for-runners of today's Navy SEALs.
Under-Water Demolition Teams found their beginnings on 6,
June 1943. Adm Earnest J. King ordered Navy Combat Demolition
Training to commence in order to cope with the obstacles that
Hitler would undoubtedly use to hinder landings in Europe. This
order was given one year before the invasion of Normandy.
To lead this training the Admiral picked Reserve Officer Draper
L. Kauffman. Training began at Fort Pierce near that of the Scouts
and Raiders. Most of Kauffman's volunteers came from the Navy's
engineering and construction battalions. Training commenced with
one grueling week designed to eliminate the men from the boys."
The men had sense enough to quit, and left us with the boys."
It was and is still considered "HELL WEEK". The training
made the use of rubber boats and surprisingly little swimming.
The assumption was that they would paddle in and work in shallow
water leaving the deep water demolitions to the Army. At this
point the men were required to wear Navy fatigues with shoes and
helmets. They were ordered to be life lined to their boats and
stay out of the water as much as possible. Kauffman's experience
was at disarming explosives, now he and his teams were learning
to use them offensively. One innovation was to use 2.5 pound packs
of tetryl paced into rubber tubes, thus making 20 pound lengths
of explosive tube that could be manipulated around obstacles for
demolition.
D-Day invasion --- Six men from Kauffmans Naval Combat Demolition
Unit Eleven (NCDU-11) were sent to England in the beginning of
November, 1943 to start preparations to clear the beaches for
the Normandy invasion. Later NCDU 11 was enlarged into 13 man
assault teams. The Scouts and Raiders were also deployed to start
their recon of the Normandy Coast.
General Rommel, Hitler's greatest military Field Marshal, had
implemented the intricate defenses found on the French coastline.
These creatively Included steel posts driven into the sand and
topped with explosives. Large 3 ton steel barricades called Belgian
Gates were placed well into the surf zone. Additionally he strategically
placed reinforced mortar and machine gun nests. The Scouts and
Raiders spent weeks gathering information during nightly surveillance
missions up and down the French coast. Replicas of the Belgian
gates were constructed on the South Coast of England for the UDT
to practice demolitions on. The strategy of the UDT was to knock
the Gates flat, not to shread and spread them along the beaches,
thereby creating more of an obstacle for the advancing troops.
The initial attack on the two American landing beaches Omaha &
Utah were to come from air bombings and shelling from the naval
offshore artillery. Then a first wave of tanks and troop carriers
were to land and clear any remaining German bunkers and snipers.
The Demolitions Gap-assault teams would come in with the second
wave and work at low tide to clear the obstacles.
As happens often during the fog of war, the Allied aircraft ended
up dropping their bombs too far inland. Navy artillery then sent
the majority of their shells far over the German positions - wreaking
havoc on the French farmlands but leaving the well positioned
German guns in perfect operating condition. These guns sent withering
ground fire against the approaching Allied forces.
The tides also ended up pushing many of the demolition crews well
ahead of the first wave. They found themselves the first to land
on the beaches. Many of the teams were killed by machine gun and
mortar fire before reaching the beach.
Other team members under enemy fire managed to set charges on
the obstacles and blow them. At one point soldiers were taking
cover behind the obstacles which were emplaced with demolitions
charged with timers. The GIs quickly made there way onto the beaches
to avoid becoming a friendly casualty of war.
The mission was to open sixteen 50 foot wide corridors for the
landing. By nightfall only thirteen were open, and these beaches
exacted a heavy toll on the Navy Gap-Assault teams.
Of the 175 UDT men on Omaha beach, 31 where killed and 60 wounded.
Their Teammates on Utah Beach faired far better because the beach
was considerably less fortified. Four were killed and11 wounded
when an artillery shell landed among one of the teams working to
clear the beach. Weeks before the invasion all available Underwater
Demolition men were sent from Fort Pierce to England. The largest
loss occurred at the landing on Omaha beach, Normandy. Within
months of the War's end the UDT teams were dispersed. This ended
a trying but evolutionary time in the history of Naval Special
Warfare.
After a major catastrophe on the island of Tarawa, the need
for the UDT in the South Pacific became glaringly clear. The islands
in this region have unpredictable tide changes and shallow reefs
that can easily thwart the progress of the naval transport vessels.
At Tarawa, the first wave made it across the reef in Amtracs,
but the second wave in Higgens boats got stuck on the reef left
exposed by the low tide. The Marines had to unload and wade to
shore. Many drowned or were killed before making the beach. The
Amtracks, without reinforcements from the second wave, were slaughtered
on the beach. It was a valuable lesson that the Navy would not
permit to be repeated. The Navy Combat Swimmers were turned to
for an answer.
The Fifth Amphibious Force set up training at Waimanalo, on the
coast of Oahu in the Hawaiian Islands. Attending were men from
Fort Pierce as well as men from the Army and Marines. Represented
were the Scouts and Raiders as well as the Naval Combat Demolitions
Teams. They hastily trained for the attack on Kwajalein on 31
January, 1944. This was a major turning point for the tactics
of the UDT. The plan was to send in night reconnaissance teams
such as the Scouts and Raiders were accustomed to. Then Admiral
Turner, worried about the presence of obstacles emplaced by the
Japanese, ordered two daylight recon operations.
The missions were to follow the standard procedure. Team one was
to go in a rubber boat in full fatigues, boots, life jackets and
metal helmets. The coral reef kept their craft too far from shore
to be certain of the beach conditions. Ens. Lewis F. Luehrs and
Chief Bill Acheson made a decision that changed the shape of Naval
Special Warfare forever. Removing all but their underwear, they
swam untethered across the reef. They returned with sketches of
the beach, gun embankment locations along with information about
a log wall built to deter landings and other vital intelligence.
Naval Combat Swimming had now entered onto the Mission Essential
Task List of the UDT.
After Kwajalein the UDT created the Naval Combat Demolition Training
and Experimental Base on Maui. Operations began in April, 1944.
Most of the procedures from Fort Pierce had been modified, with
importance placed upon developing strong swimmers. Extensive training
was conducted in the water without life lines, using face masks
and wearing swim trunks and shoes in the water. This new model
gave us the image that stands today of the WWII UDT Òther
Naked Warrior". The landings continued and at Iwo Jima the
surveying teams fared favorably. The largest casualties of the
UDT's occurred not in the water, but aboard the destroyer USS
Blessman when it was hit by a Japanese bomber. Eighteen men of
UDT Team fifteen were killed when the bomb exploded in the mess
hall. Twenty three others were injured. This was by far the most
tragic loss of life suffered by the UDT in the Pacific theater.
Up until now all the islands worked upon were in southern waters.
Soon the forces moved North toward Japan. Having no thermal protection,
the UDT men were at risk of hypothermia and severe cramps. This
problem was extreme during the surveying of Okinawa. The largest
UDT deployment in the war employed veteran Team's Seven, Twelve,
Thirteen, Fourteen and newly trained teams Eleven, Sixteen, Seventeen,
and Eighteen. Close to a thousand UDT forces worked in concert
on operations both real and deceptive to create the illusion of
landing in other locations. The landing beaches on Okinawa were
protected by pointed poles set into the coral reef of the beach.
Team's Eleven and Sixteen were sent in to blast the poles. After
all the charges were set the men swam to clear the area and the
following explosion took out all of Team Eleven's and half of
team Sixteen's targets. During the operation team Sixteen broke
from the operation due to the death of one of their men. Their
mission was considered a failure and a disgrace. Team Eleven was
sent back the following day to finish the job and then remained
to guide the forces to the beach. The UDT continued to prepare
for the invasion of Japan. After the atomic bomb was exploded
over Hiroshima and Nagasaki the war quickly ended. The need for
an invasion of Japan was averted and the UDT's role in the South
Pacific came to an end..
An Annapolis graduate Named Milton E. Miles had lived in China
and knew how to speak the language. He was sent there to do anything
in his power to prepare for an Allied landing in China. Although
the landings were never conducted Miles proved a great disturbance
to the Japanese occupied regions of China. He set up a valuable
chain of surveillance along eight hundred miles of the coast.
He also formed, in conjunction with a Chinese warlord, a guerilla
training camp called "Happy Valley". It was from there
that they commanded their many successful raids and guerilla warfare
forays against the Japanese. Another UDT man, Phil Buckelew, also
spent time under cover on Mainland China disrupting enemy lines
of communication and providing intelligence to Naval commanders.
The Philip Buckelew Naval Special Warfare Center in Coronado,
California is named for this legendary man.
The Korean War was a time for the UDT to refine and develop their
commando tactics. Their efforts were initially focused on demolitions
and mine disposal. Additionally the UDT accompanied South Korean
commandos on raids in the North to demo train tunnels. This activity
was frowned upon by the higher ranking officers of the UDT because
it was a non-traditional use of the Naval forces which took them
too far from the water line. Due to the nature of the war the
UDT maintained a low operational profile. Some of the more well
known missions include the transport of spies into North Korea
and the destruction of North Korean Fishing nets used to supply
the North Korean Army with several tons of fish annually.
Post World War II saw a major decline in the UDT. The remaining
officers and enlisted men were dedicated, hard working men. Before
the start of the Korean conflict the UDT were testing uses of
the Underwater Breathing Apparatus (UBA) and developing weapons
skills and commando operations on land in coastal regions.
They also started experiments with insertion/extraction by helicopter.
Jumping from a moving helicopter into the water or rappelling like
mountain climbers to the ground. Experimentation developed a system
for emergency extraction by plane called "Skyhook."
Skyhook utilized a large helium balloon and cable rig with harness.
A special grabbing device on the nose of a C-130 enabled a pilot
to snatch the cable tethered to the balloon and lift a person
off the ground. Once airborne the crew would winch the cable in
and retrieve the SEAL though the back of the aircraft. This technique
was discontinued for training purposes after the death of a SEAL
in Coronado on a training lift. The Teams still utilze the Fulton
skyhook for equipment extraction and retain the capability for
war if an extreme situation requires it.
The Korean war was a period of transition for the men of the UDT.
They tested their previous limits and defined new parameters for
their special style of warfare. These new techniques and expanded
horizons positioned the UDT well to assume an even broader role
as the storms of war began brewing to the South in the Vietnamese
Penninsula.
In coming months we will chronicle in more detail some of the
actual operations conducted by the UDT during the Korean conflict.
Vietnam had been colonized by the French in 1857, and was part
of French Indochina until World War II, when it fell under Japanese
rule for a short time. Fighting the Japanese, supported by the
Communists and American OSS (Office of Strategic Services which
was the pre-cursor to the CIA), created a new sense of nationalism
for the Vietnamese. World War II became the catalyst for the nationalist
movement which was led by a man calling himself Ho Chi Mihn.
After the war, France returned and sought to resume control of
Vietnam and other Japanese-controlled territories. As early as
1941, the Indochinese Communist Party called for liberation from
France. The Viet Mihn, the nationalist movement's political and
military organization, under the leadership of Ho Chi Mihn, were
gaining strength in the north. In 1945 Ho Chi Mihn proclaimed
the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam and right for the Vietnamese
to rule themselves. Their declaration of independence was written
to be similar to the United States Declaration of Independence
of 1776, hoping to gain support and sympathy from America, their
one-time ally.
Elections that followed were strongly in favor of the Viet Mihn
position. Ho Chi Mihn was proclaimed President of the new Republic
and he demanded the immediate withdrawal of the French and complete
independence for Vietnam. Ho Chi Mihn made these demands, relying
on the support and aid he was receiving from two important sources:
the Communist Chinese, and the American OSS Teams. The Communist
Chinese had trained the Viet Mihn and fought with them against
the Japanese. The American OSS had been advising him in their
common struggle against the Japanese, realizing that the Viet
Mihn was an effective fighting force and Ho Chi Mihn's organization
was the only stable leadership in Vietnam.
With the Chinese and OSS supporting Ho Chi Mihn, France found
it difficult to oppose his new Republic. By late 1945 the OSS
Teams were finally withdrawn and the French agreed to recognize
the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam, as long as it remained part
of France. The French also agreed that, if some time in the future
the country wanted to unite under Ho Chi Mihn, France would submit
to the decision of the people.
However, negotiations failed when neither side was willing to
make any real compromise. Armed confrontations began between French
Troops and the Viet Mihn, now called the National Front. The country
of Vietnam divided: Ho Chi Mihn consolidated to the north in Hanoi,
while the French set up government and command in the south at
Saigon.
The French, with their Vietnamese allies, fought against the Viet
Mihn from 1946 to 1953. This war consisted mostly of guerrilla
actions, leaving neither side with a clear advantage, although
the French seemed unlikely to finally conquer. With their military
policy which was not effective against these guerrilla tactics,
the best the French could do was to hold the primary populated
areas and main lines of communication, hoping to draw the Viet
Mihn into a major action.
The French were suffering heavy losses and casualties and needed
a major win. They believed that if they were to get the Viet Mihn
onto a conventional field of battle, France would have the upper
hand.
The trap was set in a small valley in northwestern Vietnam, which
was believed to be a guerrilla power base, about 150 miles west
of Hanoi and 25 miles from the Laotian border. Under the control
of General Henri Navarre, the French troops planned to lure the
Viet Mihn into battle with a large airborne assault force which
would secure the valley and establish a fortification around the
deserted airfield there. When the Viet Mihn attacked, the French
would destroy them.
Dien Bien Phu became one of the greatest post-WWII battles. The
French were defeated at Dien Bien Phu because they sadly underestimated
the determination and abilities of the Vietnamese guerrilla forces.
The French fortifications were insufficient; they were outmanned,
outgunned, and outmaneuvered. Neither the bravery of the French
troops, or the legendary heroics of the French Foreign Legion
paratroopers, were enough to save the situation. This defeat shocked
the French people and their government, eliminating their will
to continue the war.
In July 1954, talks between France and the new Republic, which
were being held in Geneva, finally produced an agreement. The
Geneva Agreement ended colonial rule in Vietnam with a working
plan for the smooth transition of power from the French to the
Vietnamese. The agreement divided Indochina into four parts: Laos,
Cambodia, and North and South Vietnam. The ardently Communist
Viet Mihn, lead by Ho Chi Mihn, ruled the North, while the French
assisted in the establishment of an anti-communist Vietnamese
government in the South, headed by Emperor Bao Dai.
With the northern region being the industrial center, and the
southern regions being agricultural, the division of Vietnam posed
economic problems. This division also caused a major shift in
population. The large Catholic population in the North, fearing
retaliation from the new Communist regime for their support of
the French, began an exodus to the South. Of the Viet Mihn stationed
throughout the South -- an estimated 100,000 -- by order of the
Hanoi government began their own exodus to the North. At least
5,000 of their ranks remained behind, joining the National Liberation
Front of South Vietnam to form the Viet Cong (VC). They lived
in the South Vietnamese villages and fought against the American-funded
ARVN (Army of the Republic of Viet Nam) and American troops.
Ho Chi Mihn was confident that he would win the elections, and
turned his attention toward the economic and social troubles facing
his government. He realized that the South might be aided in its
establishment by the U.S., but he did not foresee that South Vietnam,
not being a part of the original agreement, would find grounds
to cancel the elections. The American supported Premier of South
Vietnam, Ngo Dihn Diem, who replaced the self-exiled Bao Dai,
gradually increased his sphere of power, while the United States
began to assume the role of supporter left vacant by the French.
Cambodia, self-declared neutral and led by one man, Prince Norodom
Sihanouk, was the only state involved which refused to sign the
Geneva Agreement. The war did not lead into Cambodia until later
years, although Cambodia tried to play all sides against one another.
Laos, whose leader was Prince Souvanna Phouma, tried to develop
a neutralist coalition government of both pro-Western and pro-Communist
supporters. The Communist faction as called the Pathet Lao and
was headed by Prince Phouma's half-brother Prince Souphanouvoing.
The pro-Western faction was led by Prince Boun Oum who also had
the support of the 25,000-man Royal Laotian Army (RLA), which
was supported militarily and funded by the United States Government,
in order to counter a growing Communist presence in Asia.
Each faction actively tried to gain an advantage in the government.
The 1958 elections gave the Pathet Lao more votes and the US put
pressure on Souvanna Phouma to resign in favor of the American-backed,
Phoui Sananikone, who would continue the neutralist policy. This
support from the United States was offensive to many. A young
captain, Kong Le, who commanded the paratroop battalion of the
RLA, seized the Laos capital, Vientiane, demanding a return to
the neutralist policies.
The Soviet Union began sending arms, vehicles, and antiaircraft
to Kong Le's forces, while the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) sent
cadres to train the troops of the Pathet Lao.
Due to the landlocked position of Loas, to gain any advantage
American troops would have to be committed and the supply problems
were too great. The United States abandoned Laos and turned its
support of arms and military aid, including aircraft and Special
Forces Advisors, to South Vietnam.
At the end of the fifties there were few Special Operations Forces:
The Army had the Green Berets, and the Navy had their Underwater
Demolition Teams (UDT). These elite units were trained to fight
and operate behind the lines of a conventional war: specifically,
in the event of a Russian drive through Europe.
The Navy entered the Vietnam conflict in 1960 when the UDTs delivered
small water craft far up the Mekong River into Laos. In 1961 Naval
Advisers started training the Vietnamese UDT. These men were called
the Lien Doi Nguoi Nhia (LDNN), roughly the "soldiers that
fight under the sea." (NOTE: LDNN DOES
NOT STAND FOR Lien Doc Nguoi Nhia, there is no word DOC in Vietnamese
The "D" in LDNN means DOI, which means team and was
used until about 1970ish, then "D" stood for DOAN, which
means group and was used when ALL Frogman teams were under the
LDNN, SEALs, UDT Pier Security, Police Divers etc. ) So when K.
Dockery refers that LDNN stands for Lien Doc Nguoi Nhia, he is
incorrect.
President Kennedy, aware of the situations in Southeast Asia,
recognized the need for unconventional warfare and utilized Special
Operations as a measure against guerrilla activity. In a speech
to Congress in May 1961, Kennedy shared his deep respect of the
Green Berets. He announced the government's plan to put a man
on the moon, and, in the same speech, allocated over one hundred
million dollars toward the strengthening of the Special Forces
in order to expand the strength of the American conventional forces.
Realizing the Administration's favor of the Army's Green Berets,
the Navy had to determine the role it would play within the special
forces arena. In March of 1961, the Chief of Naval Operations
recommended the establishment of guerrilla and counter guerrilla
units. These units would be able to operate from sea, air, or
land. This was the beginning of the official Navy SEALs. Many
of their members came from the Navy's UDT units who had already
gained experience in commando warfare in Korea, although the UDTs
were still necessary to the Navy's amphibious force.
The first two teams were on opposite coasts: Team Two in Little
Creek, Virginia and Team ONE in Coronado, California. The men
of the newly formed SEAL Teams were educated in such unconventional
areas as hand-to-hand combat, high altitude parachuting, safecracking,
demolitions, and languages. Among the varied tools and weapons
required by the Teams, was the AR-15 assault rifle, a new design
that evolved into today's M-16. The SEAL's attended UDT Replacement
training, spent some time cutting their teeth at a UDT Team. Upon
making it to a SEAL Team, they would undergo a three month SEAL
Basic Indoctrination (SBI) training class at Camp Kerry in the
Cuymaca Mountains. Then they would enter a platoon and train in
platoon tactics, and especially for the conflict in Vietnam.
The Pacific Command recognized Vietnam as a potential hot spot
for conventional forces. In the beginning of 1962, the UDT started
hydrographic surveys and Military Assistance Command Vietnam (MACV)
was formed. In March of 1962, SEALs were deployed to Vietnam for
the purpose of training South Vietnamese commandos in the same
methods they were trained themselves.
In February 1963, operating from USS Weiss, a Naval Hydrographic
recon unit from UDT 12 started surveying just south of Da Nang.
From the beginning they encountered sniper fire and on 25 March
were attacked. The unit managed to escape without any injuries,
the survey was considered complete and the Weiss returned to Subic
Bay.
By 1963 the Vietnamese LDNN were starting to meet success within
their missions. Operating American-provided Norwegian-built "Nasty"
class fast patrol boats out of Da Nang, the LDNN were able to
make several raids against North Vietnamese targets. On 31 July,
the Nastys were used on a mission to destroy a radio transmitter
on the island of Hon Nieu. Using 88mm mortar on the night of 3
August they shelled the radar site at Cape Vinh Son.
Due to the immense fire power of the 88mm recoilless, the
North Vietnamese believed they were being bombarded by the large
guns of a US Naval ship. Under this assumption, NVA gunboats made
a daylight attack on the USS Maddox which was cruising off the
North Vietnamese coastline, intercepting radio transmissions.
This and a second attack later the same day on the USS Turner
Joy came to be know as "The Gulf of Tonkin Incident."
The Gulf of Tonkin Incident gave the Unites States the legal and
political power to justify a stronger involvement in the Vietnam
conflict. A bombing of a US Air Base on 30 October 1964 killed
five servicemen. Another attack on Christmas Eve hit a US billet
in Saigon, killing 2 servicemen. President Lyndon Johnson ordered
"tit-for-tat" reprisal: for every attack from the North
Vietnamese, American troops would respond in the same manner.
The initiation of Operation "Flaming Dart," which included
the American bombing of targets in North Vietnam, placed America
in the middle of an all out war.
The CIA began SEAL covert operations in early 1963. At the
outset of the war, operations consisted of ambushing supply movements
and locating and capturing North Vietnamese officers. Due to poor
intelligence information these operations were not very successful.
When the SEALs were given the resources to develop their own intelligence,
the information became much more timely and reliable. The SEALs
and special operations in general started showing an immense success
rate, earning their members a great number of citations.
Between 1965 and 1972, there were 46 SEALs killed in Vietnam.
On 28 October 1965, Comdr. Robert J. Fay was the first SEAL killed
in Vietnam by a mortar round. The first SEAL killed engaged in
active combat was Radar man second-class Billy Machen who was killed
in a firefight on 16 August, 1966. Ambushed during a daylight
patrol Machen's body was retrieved with the help of fire support
from two helicopters. Machen's death was a hard reality for the
SEAL teams.
The SEALs were initially deployed in and around Da Nang, training
the South in combat diving, demolitions and guerrilla/anti-guerrilla
tactics. As the war continued the SEALs found themselves positioned
in the Rung Sat Special Zone where they were to disrupt the enemy
supply and troop movements, and into the Mecong Delta to fulfill
riverine (fighting on the inland waterways) operations.
The brown water of the Delta provided the foundation for the development
of SEAL riverine operations. The SEALs adapted quickly and with
deadly results. The braces, inlets, and estuaries intermingled
and entwining left a broad area for both the North and South to
operate. The SEALs and Brown Water Navy boat crews made it their
job to win this part of the war, impeding as much as possible
the movement of troops and supplies coming from the North.
The SEAL teams experienced this war like no others. Combat with
the VC was very close and personnel. Unlike the conventional warfare
methods of firing artillery into a coordinate location, or dropping
bombs from thirty thousand feet, the SEALs operated within inches
of their targets. SEALs had to kill at short range and respond
without hesitation or be killed themselves. Into the late sixties,
the SEALs made great headway with this new style of warfare. Their's
were the most effective anti-guerrilla and guerrilla actions in
the war.
However, back at home the politics of war were working against
the administration. The Anti War protest became much louder by
the end of the sixties. The American public began to question
this war that was claiming so many of their young men. The anxiety
and anger caused by the war began to take its toll and violence
erupted at home. National Guard units were sent to college campuses
to disperse protesters. The now infamous incident at Kent State
that resulted in four fatalities being one of many clashes between
protesters and the government.
SEALs continued to make forays into North Vietnam and Laos and
unofficially into Cambodia, controlled by the Studies and Observations
Group. The SEALs from Team 2 started a unique deployment of SEAL
team members working alone with South Vietnamese commandos. In
1967 a SEAL unit named Detachment Bravo (Det Bravo) was formed
to operate these mixed US/ARVN units called South Vietnamese Provincial
Reconnaissance Units (PRU).
In the beginning of 1968 the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong
orchestrated a major offensive against South Vietnam. Virtually
every major city felt the effects of the "Tet Offensive."
The North hoped it would prove to be America's Dien Bien Phu.
They wanted to break the American public's desire to continue
the war. As propaganda the Tet Offensive was successful: America
was weary of a war that could not be won, for principles no one
was sure of. However, North Vietnam suffered tremendous casualties,
and, from a purely military standpoint the Tet Offensive was a
major disaster to the Communists.
By 1970 the US had decided to remove itself from the conflict.
Nixon initiated a Plan of Vietnamization which would return the
responsibility of defense back to the South Vietnamese. Conventional
forces were being withdrawn, however, operations of the SEALs
continued. The SEALS had developed a new base at the tip of the
Ca Mau Peninsula and created a floating fire base, now known as
Seafloat, by welding together fourteen barges. Accessible from
sea, it also provided a landing area for helios.
On 6 June 1972, Lt. Melvin S. Dry was killed when entering the
water after jumping from a helicopter at least 35 feet above the
surface. Part of an aborted SDV operation to retrieve Prisoners
of War. Lt. Dry was the last Navy SEAL killed in the Vietnam conflict.
See the book review section under "DROP ZONE" for some
great books detailing the hair raising exploits of the SEALs in
Vietnam.
In 1983 existing UDT teams were redesignated as SEAL teams, so
today there are six SEAL Teams operating plus DEVGRU (Naval Special
Warfare Development group). DEVGRU is the SEALs' counter-terrorist
unit, after SEAL TEAM 6 was disbanded.
| Western teams | Eastern Teams |
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SEAL Team 8 is the newest team on the East Coast. They're
doing some new and improved stuff in deploying as a strike force
from carriers.
Stationed: HQ and Western teams: Coronado Naval Base, San Diego,
California. Eastern teams: Little Creek, Virginia. DEVGRU: Dam
Neck, Virginia.