Mickey Block and William Kimball, Before the Dawn. Canton, OH: Daring Books. Paperback New York: Pocket Books, 1989. Both the front and back covers of the paperback say that Block was a Navy SEAL, but he was never in fact a SEAL, nor does the text of the book really claim he was. He was in Special Boat Unit 524, a PBR unit based at Sa Dec, 1968 to 1969.
Roy Boehm, with Charles Sasser, First SEAL. New York: Pocket Books, 1997. xii, 308 pp. Boehm was the first commander of SEAL Team Two when it was founded in 1962. His first tour in Vietnam, training an LDNN unit and then leading it on missions in the Mekong Delta, began at the end of 1963.
T.J. Bosiljevac, SEALs: UDT/SEAL Operations in Vietnam. New York: Ivy Books, 1990.
Kenneth Conboy and James Morrison, "SEALs on the Trail," Naval History 14:5 (October 2000).
Harry Constance, with Randall Fuerst, Good to Go: The Life and Times of a Decorated Member of the U.S. Navy's Elite SEAL Team Two. New York: Morrow, 1997. pb New York: Avon, 1998. xii, 413 pp. Constance did three tours in Vietnam as a SEAL, beginning approximately October 1967.
Dennis Cummings, The Men Behind the Trident: SEAL Team One in Vietnam. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1997. xvi, 270 pp. Oral history.
Kevin Dockery, Free Fire Zones: The True Story of U.S. Navy SEAL Combat in Vietnam. New York: HarperTorch (HarperCollins), 2000. viii, 241 pp.
Kevin Dockery and Bill Fawcett, eds., The Teams: An Oral History of the U.S. Navy Seals. New York: Morrow, 1998. xiv, 283 pp. pb New York: Avon, 1999. xiv, 289 pp. Only a moderate amount of Vietnam material. Accounts by six SEALs, of whom James Tipton went to Vietnam late in 1967; Georg Doran went in late 1962 to train the Biet Hai at Danang, and in 1970 to run the LDNN school; Jack Rowell went late in 1967 and again in late 1968; James Janos a.k.a. Governor Jesse "The Body" Ventura apparently had some Vietnam experience in a UDT but does not describe it.
Kevin Dockery, Navy SEALs: A History, Part II, The Vietnam Years. New York: Berkley, 2002. x, 339 pp. From interviews by Bud Brutsman.
Barry W. Enoch, with Gregory A. Walker, foreword by Bob Kerrey, Teammates: SEALs at War. New York: Pocket Books, 1996. xvii, 318 pp. Enoch joined the Navy in 1955, became a founding member of SEAL Team One, was sent to Vietnam for his first tour in March 1963, and sent to Danang to assist covert maritime operations against North Vietnam. He had repeated later tours to the end of the war; retired a Chief Gunner's Mate.
Bill Fawcett, ed., Hunters and Shooters: An Oral History of the U.S. Navy SEALs in Vietnam. New York: Morrow, 1995.
Robert A. Gormly, Combat Swimmer: Memoirs of a Navy SEAL. New York: NAL/Dutton, 1998. pb New York: Onyx, 1999. x, 310 pp. Index. Less than half (pp. 47-180 in the paperback) deals with Vietnam. Gormly, an officer in SEAL Team 2, served two tours in the Mekong Delta, from the Long Tuan Secret Zone near the mouth of the Bassac, to Nui Coto in the Seven Mountains of Chau Doc. Arrived January 1967 as squad leader, had to leave when wounded in early June. Returned for second tour May 1968, left in November. Those who are interested in the SEALs outside the context of Vietnam may also want to read about Gormly's relationship with Dick Marcinko (whom he replaced as commander of SEAL Team 6 in 1983), in Gormly's participation in the Grenada operation later in 1983, etc.
Ivy Harper, Waltzing Matilda: The Life and Times of Nebraska Senator Robert Kerrey. New York: St. Martin's, 1992. xxi, 263 pp. J. [Joseph] Robert Kerrey won the Congressional Medal of Honor during his brief service as a SEAL officer in Vietnam (see under Kerrey, below). He served as Governor of Nebraska 1983-87, and was elected to the US Senate in 1988.
Joel M. Hutchins, Swimmers among the Trees: SEALs in the Vietnam War. Novato, CA: Presidio, 1996. The dust jacket says Hutchins is a former SEAL, but this is not true. The book contains many detailed descriptions of operations for which the sources are unexplained--Hutchins, who had never been a SEAL, had not participated in them, does not mention any names of participants, does not say he has interviewed participants, and does not cite documents or written sources.
Bob Kerrey (J[oseph] Robert Kerrey), When I Was a Young Man. New York: Harcourt, 2002. xi, 270 pp. (relatively large print, not a lot of words per page). Kerrey chose in 1966 to join the Navy rather than wait to be drafted into the Army. Although the future senator won the Congressional Medal of Honor in Vietnam, his time in-country had been brief (January to March 1969), and it occupies a rather small part of this book. Pages 111-157 cover the period of his military training--OCS, UDT, and SEAL. Pages 159-179 describe his early weeks in Vietnam, during which he led his SEAL squad on several night ambushes that did not make enemy contact, and give some thoughts about the nature of the war. He devotes only ten pages (pp. 179-189) to the two incidents in which he saw actual combat. In the first, on February 25, 1969, his squad went into the village of Thanh Phong, in what he calls Thanh Phu province (there was no Thanh Phu province; I believe that the village was at the southern tip of Kien Hoa province, and that Thanh Phu was probably the name of a district in Kien Hoa). The SEALs were looking for some high-level Viet Cong cadres who had been reported to be in the village. In a confused incident that recently aroused controversy (see book by Vistica below), the SEAL squad killed a number of women and children. It was the second incident, on March 14, 1969, that won Kerrey his Medal of Honor. He was severely wounded leading his squad in an attack on a Communist sapper unit, on an island very close to Nha Trang.
Greg McPartlin, Combat Corpsman: The Vietnam Memoir of a Navy SEALs Medic. New York: Berkley Caliber (Penguin), 2005. 319 pp. McPartlin joined the Navy in order to become a corpsman assigned to the Marines. He arrived in Vietnam at the beginning of 1968, assigned to Third Force Recon. After three months, his platoon had suffered such heavy losses it was rotated out of Vietnam. He then shifted to become a medic with the SEALs. He went to Vietnam late in 1969 and was assigned to Old Nam Can, in the Ca Mau Peninsula.
Richard Marcinko with John Weisman, Rogue Warrior. New York: Pocket Books, 1992. Parts of this book cover Marcinko's service as a SEAL officer in the Mekong Delta (roughly the first halves of 1967 and 1968) and as US Naval Attache in Phnom Penh, 1973-74, working to keep the Mekong River open.
Rad Miller, Jr., Whattaya Mean I Can't Kill 'Em? A Navy SEAL in Vietnam. New York: Ivy, 1998. 245 pp. Miller served very briefly off the coast of Vietnam aboard a DER involved in MARKET TIME in 1966. He began a Vietnam tour in mid 1967, with UDT 11. Finally he served a tour as a SEAL assigned to Echo Platoon of Team 1, mostly in the Mekong Delta, beginning in February 1969.
Gary R. Smith & Alan Maki, Death in the Jungle: Diary of a Navy SEAL. Boulder: Paladin, 1994. pb New York: Ivy, 1996, 321 pp. Smith completed UDT training and joined UDT-12 in December 1965; he served 32 months in Vietnam.
Gary R. Smith & Alan Maki, Death in the Delta: Diary of a Navy SEAL. pb New York: Ivy, 1996, 321 pp. Sequel to the above; covers Smith's third and fourth tours in Vietnam, 1969-1970, including work with PRU and LDNN.
Gary R. Smith, Master Chief: Diary of a Navy SEAL. pb New York: Ivy, 1996, 308 pp. Sequel to the above; covers Smith's fifth tour (1971) in Vietnam, with November Platoon, SEAL Team 1, in Dinh Tuong province, and his post-war career.
Gregory L. Vistica, The Education of Lieutenant Kerrey. New York: St. Martin's/Thomas Dunne Books, 2003. xix, 296 pp. I have not yet actually read this book, but my impression is that it is much more serious than Kerrey's memoir (see above) about trying to get to the truth of the Thanh Phong incident.
Lt. Cmdr. Michael J. Walsh and Greg Walker, SEAL!. pb New York: Pocket Books, 1995. 292 pp. (Copyright is 1994, but there is no indication of an actual 1994 hardcover.) Walsh served multiple tours in Vietnam starting in Mekong Delta late 1968.
Steven L. Waterman, Just a Sailor: A Navy Diver's Story of Photography, Salvage, and Combat. New York: Ballantine, 2000. 284 pp. Waterman was an underwater photographer for the Navy. Chaper 18 covers his Vietnam service in 1969 with UDT-13 (though he had not really had UDT training), initially in I Corps, later operating off the Terrell County (LST-1157) at the mouth of the Song Ong Doc in the Ca Mau Peninsula.
Chief James Watson and Kevin Dockery, Point Man: Inside the Toughest and Most Deadly Unit in Vietnam by a Founding Member of Elite Navy SEALs. New York: Morrow, 1993. Watson served three tours in Vietnam, beginning in 1967.
Chief James Watson with Kevin Dockery, Walking Point. New York: Morrow, 1997. 320 pp. pb New York: Avon, 1998. 296 pp.
Darrel D. Whitcomb, "Rescuing BAT 21." Naval History, 12:2 (March/April 1998). SEAL Tom Norris rescued a downed flier, Iceal Hambleton, under very difficult circumstances in Quang Tri province during the Easter Offensive of 1972.
Darryl Young, The Element of Surprise: Navy SEALs in Vietnam. New York: Ivy Books, 1990. xxiv, 274 pp. Covers Young's service in Juliett Platoon, SEAL Team 1, in Vietnam (near the mouth of the Bassac River), June to December 1970. He also served a later tour in Vietnam with UDT 11.
Some SEAL documents have been placed on-line in the Jerry J. Fletcher Collection, in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University. These include:
CTF 116, 161314Z Oct 1969, SEAL Ops. Rules of engagement, particularly in regard to SEAL operations directed against VC medical facilities.
D.D. Ellis, Officer in Charge, SEAL Team Detachment Alfa, Ninth Platoon, End of Tour Report. 19 December 1969. 3 pp. Covers the period 9 June to 8 December 1969. The platoon, based at Nha Be, operated in the Rung Sat Special Zone (RSSZ), Can Giuoc district of Long An province, Nhon Trach district of Bien Hoa province, and Western Long Le district of Phuoc Tuy province.
C.S. Prouty, Officer in Charge, SEAL Team Detachment Golf, Mike Platoon, End of Tour Report. 1 March 1970. 5 pp. The platoon operated in the Rung Sat Special Zone (RSSZ), based at Cat Lo, 11 September to 1 November 1969. In the Seafloat Area of Operations, lower Camau Peninsula, 1 November 1969 to 14 February 1970.
Compilation of material on the issue of communications security, apparently late 1970, no title or compiler given. Startes with an excerpt from an October 1970 report on enemy communications intelligence efforts, from Naval Advisory Group, MACV. After this there are statements urging SEALs to pay attention to threat of enemy COMINT efforts, and improve their communications security, with suggestions about how this can be done.
LTJG Roger Clapp, handwritten letter January 22, 1971, discussing operations of Victor Platoon, currently based at Long Phu and operating in several provinces, preparing for a move to Dong Tam. Brief comment on LDNN.
LT Aubrey Davis, Jr., Officer in Charge, SEAL Detachment ALFA, 8th Platoon, End of Tour Report. 15 February 1971; covers the period 16 August 1970 to 14 February 1971. 6 pp. 8th Platoon was based at Dong Tam, and was assigned to prevent mortar attacks against Dong Tam, and to conduct operations against VC infranstructure in Dinh Tuong province. Discussions of the various organizations that provided intelligence is interesting. The PRUs give good intelligence, "and show a strong desire to resume operations with SEALs." Phoenix/Phuong Hoang apparently has good intelligence, but seems to give it only to Vietnamese forces, not to the SEALs.
LT H.R. Couch, Officer in Charge, Detachment Golf, Whiskey Platoon, End of Tour Report. 21 April 1971; covers the period 13 November 1970 to 20 April 1971. 3 pp. Whiskey Platoon operated from Advance Tactical Support Base Solid Anchor [at or near Nam Can, in An Xuyen province in the extreme south of the Mekong Delta].
Roger Clapp, Officer in Charge, Victor Platoon, Dong Tam, handwritten letter to LT Jerry Fletcher, officer in charge of November Platoon, which was soon [approximately mid June 1971] to come to Dong Tam to relieve Clapp's platoon. Undated; first half of 1971. Describes the situation and missions of the SEALs at Dong Tam.
Roger B. Clapp, Officer in Charge, Detachment Golf, Victor Platoon, End of Tour Report. 29 May 1971; covers the period 17 December 1970 to 26 May 1971. 3 pp. Victor Platoon had operated out of Long Phu from 17 December 1970 to 14 February 1971, and out of Dong Tam from 14 February to 25 May 1971. The discussion of what organizations provided useful intelligence is interesting.
COMUSMACV, 9 June 1971, The Responsibility of Command. Stresses that rules of engagement, specified operational boundaries, and time limits on operations, "which on occasion are militarily undesirable, must be scrupulously obeyed." "This has not been the case in all instances in the past."
Handwritten patrol order, 2 July 1971, probably SEAL Team One, Detachment Golf, November Platoon.
Handwritten patrol order, 7 July 1971, probably SEAL Team One, Detachment Golf, November Platoon.
LCDR D. Venter, Officer in Charge, HA(L)-3, Detachment 7, SEAL Op of 7 July 1971. Venter praises the skill and courage of SEALs who, while getting air support from the Seawolves of HA(L)-3, were preventing the enemy from putting up as much anti-aircraft fire as they otherwise would have.
Handwritten patrol order, probably SEAL Team One, Detachment Golf, November Platoon.
R.E. Mullen, Intelligence Officer, Naval Special Warfare Group, Vietnam, SEAL Intelligence Support, 20 July 1971.
CTU 116.6.2 [Lt. Jerry Fletcher] to CINCPACFLT, 271811Z Jul 1971, SEAL Spot Report on an operation in the vicinity of XS037564, on 27 July 1971.
Officer in Charge, SEAL Team One Det Golf November Platoon [Jerry J. Fletcher], Dong Tam SEAL Detachment, Relief of, 25 August 1971. Memo to the Officer in Charge of the platoon that would be relieving November Platoon, approximately 15 November to 15 December, describing such things as what equipment and supplies the reliving platoon should bring, and what it would find available at Dong Tam. Enclosure 1, a memo by LTJG Thomas Klephammer giving a bit more detail about environment and operations, is included in the same .pdf file. Enclosure 2 is online as a separate item: Gary R. Smith RM-1, Nov. Plt. Intelligence Section, 20 August 1971. 2 pp. Smith, who had been running the intelligence section of November Platoon, describes it (and says a little about its relations with RVN agencies) for the benifit of the petty officer who was about to replace him. Short but interesting.
Officer in Charge, SEAL Team One Det Golf November Platoon [Jerry J. Fletcher], Compromise of U.S. Navy SEAL Missions by Vietnamese Sources, 27 September 1971. 3 pp. LT A. M. Todd, Officer in Charge, SEAL Team One Detachment Golf, First Endorsement on CTU 1161.6.2 ltr 3000 dtd 27 Sept 71. Undated. Recommended that SEALs cease operations in South Vietnam if Vietnamese authorities did not show more respect for SEALs' operations security.
Officer in Charge, SEAL Team One Det Golf November Platoon [Jerry J. Fletcher], End of Tour Report, 24 November 1971. 5 pp. Relations with the Vietnamese have been deteriorating (copies of Fletcher's letter of 27 September discussing compromise of SEAL operations, and LT Todd's endorsement of Fletcher's letter, both listed above, were enclosed with this report.) SEALs had been prohibited from targeting VCI as of 11 June 1971.
Preliminary draft of a memo, Brightlight Recovery Procedures; Recommendations For, From OIC, SEAL Team One Det Golf, Nov Plt [Lt. Jerry Fletcher], To: Commander, Delta Naval Forces. This draft memo on ways SEALs might assist in the recovery of American POWs was sent to OIC, SEAL Team One Det Golf, for his comments; he replied with comments dated 26 October 1971.
Copyright © 1996, 1998 , 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007, Edwin E. Moise. This document may be reproduced only by permission. Revised April 25, 2007.