How to Become a Navy SEAL: Everything You Need to Know to Become a Member of the US Navy's Elite Force
By Don Mann
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About this ebook
To become a SEAL in the Naval Special Warfare/Naval Special Operations (NSW/NSO) community, you must first go through what is often considered to be the most physically and mentally demanding military training in the world. With this book, you can prepare yourself by learning what to expect before taking on the ruthless and rewarding job of defending your country against foes around the world. This guide includes advice from current and former Navy SEALs on direct action warfare, special reconnaissance, counterterrorism, and foreign internal defense. When there’s nowhere else to turn, Navy SEALs are in their element. They achieve the impossible by way of conditioned response, sheer willpower, and absolute dedication to their training, their missions and their fellow special ops team members.
Don Mann
Don Mann, a bestselling author and accomplished endurance athlete and mountaineer, played a crucial role in some of America’s most daring military missions for more than two decades. A former member of Navy SEAL Team Six who was twice captured by enemy forces, he now focuses his attention on inspiring others to achieve goals they never thought they could. As a sought-after motivational speaker and trainer, Mann addresses a wide range of audiences around the country―from major corporations to universities to professional sports teams―with a message that is equal parts inspiration and strategy. Mann’s other books include Inside Seal Team Six, The Modern Day Gunslinger, The U.S. Navy SEAL Survival Handbook, and the Thomas Crocker thrillers. He lives in Virginia Beach, Virginia.
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How to Become a Navy SEAL - Don Mann
Copyright © 2014 by Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Mann, Don, 1957-
How to become a Navy SEAL : everything you need to know to become a member of the U.S. Navy’s elite force / Don Mann.
pages cm
ISBN 978-1-62087-186-7 (alk. paper)
1. United States. Navy. SEALs. 2. United States. Navy. SEALs—Vocational guidance. I. Title.
VG87.M25 2014
359.9’84--dc23
2014015208
Cover design by Rain Saukas
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-62873-487-4
Printed in China
CONTENTS
Introduction: The Beginning
Chapter 1: Who Are These Americans?
Chapter 2: Know What You’re Getting Into
Chapter 3: How to Become a SEAL Candidate
Chapter 4: Training, Education, and Placement
Chapter 5: The Journey Begins
Afterword
Appendix 1 ASVAB Sample Questions
Appendix 2 Nutrition and Training Guides
Index
INTRODUCTION
The Beginning
For outstanding performance in combat during the invasion of Normandy, June 6, 1944. Determined and zealous in the fulfillment of an extremely dangerous hazardous mission, the Navy Combat Demolition Unit of Force O
landed on the Omaha Beach
with the first wave under devastating enemy artillery machine-gun and sniper fire. With practically all explosives lost and with their force seriously depleted by heavy casualties the remaining officers and men carried on gallantly, salvaging explosives as they were swept ashore and in some instances commandeering bulldozers to remove obstacles. In spite of these grave handicaps, the Demolition crews succeeded initially in blasting five gaps through enemy obstacles for the passage of assault forces to the Normandy shore and within two days had sapped over eighty-five percent of the Omaha Beach
area of German-placed traps. Valiant in the face of grave danger and persistently aggressive against fierce resistance, the Navy Combat Demolition Unit rendered daring and self-sacrificing service in the performance of a vital mission, thereby sustaining the high traditions of the United States Naval Service—Presidential Unit Citation, one of three awarded to the Navy for the Normandy landings.
In the fall of 1942, a small detachment of sailors—demolitioneers
—having been given a crash course in cable cutting, commando attacks, and, of course, demolition at an amphibious training base in Little Creek, Virginia, sailed to French North Africa to conduct its first World War II mission: part of Operation Torch, a joint British-American invasion that, if successful, would give the Allies open access to the soft underbelly of Europe—Sicily and Italy—and ultimately Germany.
Under cover of darkness, the maritime commandos came to the mouth of the Wadi Sebou River in Morocco, 75 mm artillery fire raining down on them from the fortress of the Kasbah. Their mission was to remove the boom and net, held up by a heavy cable, that were blocking the port and the way to Port Lyautey Airfield, occupied by the Axis-friendly Vichy French military.
The operation was perilous—heavy squalls, enemy fire, and monster surf threatened to quash the mission of the 17 men in their Higgins boat, a shallow barge-like landing craft. The men reached the net, cut it with explosive cable cutters and raced downstream, gunfire from the Kasbah in their wake. Not one man was hit. The net was swept away, and the USS Dallas rammed through the river boom, unloading its troops, who captured the airfield.
These men, who were part one of the first successful Naval demolition teams, went back to the United States to help the military create more obstacle clearance units. By 1943 orders went out to form special combat demolition units, and swiftly. The enemy—Germany and the other Axis powers—would certainly create every manner of obstacle to slow the landing by sea of Allied troops in Axis strongholds such as Sicily, and the coast of Normandy in France. If forced to debark in heavy surf Allied troops could lose their weapons and worse, drown or be shot as they slogged through hip-high water. The Allied amphibious forces needed the support of advance demolition teams. These units would be sent first to the beaches of Sicily and a year later, to Normandy to open channels through the heavily fortified shore prior to the historic D-Day landing there in June of 1944.
imgesTroops wade ashore at Omaha Beach on D-Day, June 6, 1944.
Military orders also called for the creation and training of sailors for permanent naval demolition units. Led by Lieutenant Commander Draper L. Kauffman, who had received the Navy Cross for disarming an intact enemy bomb at Pearl Harbor, allowing the U.S. military to study it, the training program set up at Fort Pierce, Florida, turned out Naval Combat Demolition Units (NCDU) specialists who could map enemy beaches, knock out mines, explode obstacles, and open the way for Allied assaults in the most dire combat.
In the Pacific Theater of Operations, Marines landing on islands and atolls required a different type of assistance than that of the European Theater.
At Tarawa Atoll in the Gilbert Islands U.S. Marines had been met, in November of 1943, with 4,500 well-fortified, well-prepared Japanese soldiers in a bloody scramble to secure that piece of land. The battle left 6,400 Americans, Koreans, and Japanese dead. The Americans gained control of the atoll, but the Japanese had fought down to the man in a show of resistance not seen in earlier amphibious landings. It was clear that in the push to control key islands in the Pacific Marines would need underwater reconnaissance and demolition of any obstructions, particularly the coral reefs that crowded the coastal waters. There was also the possibility of Japanese mines.
Marine demolition teams storm a Japanese stronghold on Betio Island in the Tarawa Atoll of the Gilbert Islands, November 1943.
The first Underwater Demolition Teams (UDTs), One and Two, were created when 30 officers and 150 enlisted men from the SeaBees, Marines, Army Engineers, and others who had trained at Fort Pierce, were brought to Waimanalo Amphibious Training Base on Oahu, Hawaii, and later to a Naval Combat Demolition Training and Experimental Base on Maui. For Pacific missions they had to know how to graph the coastline and blast. And they had to be able to swim long distances. Earlier nighttime reconnaissance had been a failure, so the UDTs had to perform their missions in daylight, and that required strong swimmers, not equipment.
Often in nothing more than swim suits, fins, and dive masks, these brave men participated in every significant amphibious landing in the Pacific—Eniwetok, Saipan, Guam, Leyte, Iwo Jima, Okinawa, Brunei Bay, among others.
*****
The story of the United States Navy’s frogmen is a story of adventure. Of brave men against the enemy . . . and against the sea. The work they did in the Pacific in World War II, and later in the waters of Korea . . . stamps the underwater demolition team sailors as giants of physical strength, and towers of moral and physical courage. The average frogman is not a giant. What is it then that makes a UDT man? Watch. We’ll show you.
Corny as the voice-over narrative from the U.S. Navy’s 1957 documentary The Navy Frogmen sounds, the message, even today, is not far off. Today’s Naval Special Warfare operators, or SEALs—for SEa, Air and Land, which describes the environments in which they operate—the men responsible for some of the most difficult and dangerous missions have their genesis in the early unconventional warfare units of World War II.
Beginning in 1950 and throughout the Korea Wars, UDTs distinguished themselves, performing beach reconnaissance, channel marking, mine sweeping, demolition, and going behind enemy lines to destroy railroads and tunnels in key port and coastal cities such as Inchon, Taechon, Wonsan, and Hungnam. A decade later Underwater Demolition Teams would travel up the Mekong River deep into Laos to deliver small watercraft during the Vietnam War.
Members of U.S. Navy SEAL Team One move down the Bassac River in a SEAL Team Assault Boat (STAB) during operations along the river south of Saigon, November 1962.
Credit: J.D. Randal, JO1, Department of Defense, Department of the Navy, Naval Photographic Center.
By spring of 1961 President John F. Kennedy, understanding that the conflict in Southeast Asia was unlike any previous conventional war, decided there was a need for a Naval special force like that of the Army’s Green Berets or Special Forces, whose roots lay in World War II’s Office of Strategic Services (OSS), and who were highly trained in guerilla warfare.