This fully illustrated study describes the vital combat roles of the
US Special Warfare units, latterly including the renowned SEALs, during
two of the deadliest conflicts of the Cold War.
During the Korean War and the Vietnam War, US Navy Special Warfare units
played a variety of vital combat roles amid two of the deadliest
conflicts of the Cold War. In Korea, underwater demolition teams (UDTs)
surveyed beaches for amphibious operations, cleared sea mines from
harbors, conducted seaborne raids against inshore targets, and served as
scouts for the infiltration of Korean guerrillas and British Royal
Marine Commando raids along the North Korean coast. In South Vietnam,
UDTs surveyed beaches and demolished Viet Cong bunkers, supply caches,
and river obstacles in the Mekong Delta. The SEALs (Sea Air Land teams)
deployed entire platoons into the Mekong Delta and the Rung Sat Special
Zone to conduct guerrilla warfare against the Viet Cong that included
ambushes, reconnaissance, and capturing leaders and supply caches. In
addition, the SEALs also played important roles in the Phoenix Program
and in rescuing prisoners of war. Fully illustrated throughout, this
study explores how the US Navy's specially trained naval commandos
accomplished their missions in Korea and Vietnam.