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Underwater Demolition Team

Underwater Demolition Teams (UDT), or frogmen, were amphibious units created by the United States Navy during World War II with specialized non-tactical missions. They were predecessors of the navy's current SEAL teams.

Underwater Demolition Teams
Patch of the Underwater Demolition Teams.
Active15 August 1942 – present (as SEALs)
CountryUnited States
BranchUnited States Navy
TypeAmphibious warfare
Role
Garrison/HQFort Pierce, Florida, U.S.
Maui, Hawaii, U.S.
Nickname(s)UDT, Frogmen
EngagementsOperation Overlord
Operation Torch
Battle of Kwajalein
Battle of Roi Namur
Battle of Saipan
Battle of Tinian
Battle of Guam
Battle of Peleliu
Battle of Iwo Jima
Battle of Okinawa
Borneo campaign
Battle of Leyte
Invasion of Lingayen Gulf
Operation Beleaguer
Korean War
Vietnam War
UDT Memorial at Bellows AFB, photographed in October 2016[1]

Their primary WWII function began with reconnaissance and underwater demolition of natural or man-made obstacles obstructing amphibious landings. Postwar they transitioned to scuba gear changing their capabilities. With that they came to be considered more elite and tactical during the Korean and Vietnam Wars. UDTs were pioneers in underwater demolition, closed-circuit diving, combat swimming, and midget submarine (dry and wet submersible) operations. They later were tasked with ensuring recovery of space capsules and astronauts after splash down in the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo space flight programs.[2] Commando training was added making them the forerunner to the United States Navy SEAL program that exists today.[3]

In 1983, after additional SEAL training, the UDTs were re-designated as SEAL Teams or Swimmer Delivery Vehicle Teams (SDVTs). SDVTs have since been re-designated SEAL Delivery Vehicle Teams.[4]

Early history

The United States Navy studied the problems encountered by the disastrous Allied amphibious landings during the Gallipoli Campaign of World War I. This contributed to the development and experimentation of new landing techniques in the mid-1930s. In August 1941, landing trials were performed and one hazardous operation led to Army Second Lieutenant Lloyd E. Peddicord being assigned the task of analyzing the need for a human intelligence (HUMINT) capability.[3]

When the U.S. entered World War II, the Navy realized that in order to strike at the Axis powers the U.S. forces would need to perform a large number of amphibious attacks. The Navy decided that men would have to go in to reconnoiter the landing beaches, locate obstacles and defenses, as well as guide the landing forces ashore. In August 1942, Peddicord set up a recon school for his new unit, Navy Scouts and Raiders, at the amphibious training base at Little Creek, Virginia.[3]

In 1942, the Army and Navy jointly established the Amphibious Scout and Raider School at Fort Pierce, Florida. Here Lieutenant Commander Phil H. Bucklew, the "Father of Naval Special Warfare", helped organize and train what became the Navy's 'first group' to specialize in amphibious raids and tactics.

The need for intelligence gathering prior to landings became paramount following the amphibious assault at the Battle of Tarawa in November 1943. Although Navy and Marine Corps planners had identified coral as an issue, they incorrectly assumed landing craft would be able to crawl over the coral. Marines were forced to exit their craft in chest deep water a thousand yards from shore, with many men drowning due to the irregularities of the reefs and Japanese gunners inflicting heavy U.S. casualties.[3]

After that experience, Rear admiral Kelley Turner, Commander of the V Amphibious Corps (VAC), directed Seabee Lt. Crist (CEC) to come up with a means to deal with the coral and the men to do it. Lt. Crist staged 30 officers and 150 enlisted men from the 7th Naval Construction Regiment[5] at Waipio Amphibious Operating Base on Oahu to form the nucleus of a reconnaissance and demolition training program. It is here that the UDTs of the Pacific were born.[6][7]

Later in war, the Army Engineers passed down demolition jobs to the U.S. Navy. It then became the Navy's responsibility to clear any obstacles and defenses in the near shore area.[citation needed]

A memorial to the founding of the UDT has been built at Bellows Air Force Station near the original Amphibious Training Base (ATB) in Oahu.

Naval Combat Demolition Units

 
U.S. Naval Combat Demolition insignia. – U.S. Navy Seal Museum

In early May 1943, a two-phase "Naval Demolition Project" was ordered by the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) "to meet a present and urgent requirement". The first phase began at Amphibious Training Base (ATB) Solomons, Maryland with the establishment of Operational Naval Demolition Unit No. 1. Six Officers and eighteen enlisted men reported from the Seabees dynamiting and demolition school at Camp Peary for a four-week course.[8][9] Those Seabees were immediately sent to participate in the invasion of Sicily[10] where they were divided in three groups that landed on the beaches near Licata, Gela and Scoglitti.[11]

Also in May, the Navy created a Naval Combat Demolition Units (NCDUs) tasked with eliminating beach obstructions in advance of amphibious assaults, going ashore in an LCRS inflatable boat.[12] Each NCDU consisted of five enlisted men led by a single, junior (CEC) officer. In early May, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Ernest J. King, picked Lieutenant Commander Draper L. Kauffman to lead the training. The first six classes graduated from "Area E" at the Seabee's Camp Peary between May and mid-July.[13] Training was moved to Fort Pierce,Florida where the first class began mid-July 1943. Despite the move and having the Scouts Raiders base close by, Camp Peary was Kauffman's primary source of recruits. "He would go up to Camp Peary's Dynamite School and assemble the Seabees in the auditorium saying: "I need volunteers for hazardous, prolonged and distant duty."[14] Kauffman's other volunteers came from the U.S. Marines, and U.S. Army combat engineers. Training commenced with one grueling week designed to "separate the men from the boys". Some said that "the men had sense enough to quit, leaving Kauffman with the boys."[15] It was and is still considered the first "Hell Week".

Normandy

In early November 1943 NCDU-11 was assigned as the advance NCDU party for Operation Overlord. They would be joined in England by 33 more NCDUs. They trained with the 146th, 277th and 299th Combat Engineers to prepare for the landing.[16] Each Unit had five Combat engineers attached to it. The first 10 NCDUs divided into three groups.[16] The senior officer, by rank, was the commanding officer of Group III, Lieutenant Smith (CEC). He assumed command in an unofficial capacity.[16] His Group III worked on experimental demolitions and developed the Hagensen Pack.[16](an innovation that used 2.5-pound (1.1 kg) of tetryl placed into rubber tubes that could be twisted around obstacles)[17] As more teams arrived a NCDU Command was created for NCDUs: 11, 22–30, 41–46, 127–8, 130–42[16]

 
"NCDU 45"; Ensign Karnowski, Chief Carpenters Mate Conrad C. Millis, MMCB2 Lester Meyers and three gunners mates. The unit received a Presidential Unit Citation with Ens. Karnowski earning the Navy Cross & French Croix de Guerre with Palm, while MM2 Meyers received a Silver Star. Two men were wounded and one was killed.
 
80-G-258013 At Morotai NCDU 21 with MacArthur's 7th Fleet makes a channel using 8 tons of explosives in a single blast. Debris was thrown 800 yards or nearly a half mile.

The Germans had constructed elaborate defenses on the French coast. These included steel posts driven into the beach and topped with explosive charges. Large 3-ton steel barricades called Belgian Gates and hedgehogs were placed throughout the tidal zone. Behind which was a network of reinforced: coastal artillery, mortar and machine gun positions.

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 NCDUs to practice demolitions on. It was possible to blow a gate to pieces, but that only created a mass of tangled iron creating more of an obstacle. The NCDUs found that the best method was to blast the structural joints of a gate so that it fell down flat.

The NCDU teams (designated Demolitions Gap-Assault teams) would come in at low tide to clear the obstacles. Their mission was to open sixteen 50-foot (15 m) wide corridors for the landing at each of the U.S. landing zones (Omaha Beach and Utah Beach). Unfortunately, the plans were not executed as laid out. The preparatory air and naval bombardment was ineffective, leaving many German guns to fire on the assault. Also, tidal conditions caused difficulties for the NCDUs. Despite heavy German fire and casualties, the NCDUs charges opened gaps in the defenses.

As the infantry came ashore, some used obstacles for cover that had demolition charges on them. The greatest difficulty was on Omaha Beach. By nightfall thirteen of the planned sixteen gaps were open. Of the 175 NCDU men that landed, 31 were killed and 60 were wounded. The attack on Utah Beach was better, four dead and eleven wounded.[6] Overall, NCDUs suffered a 53 percent casualty rate. NCDUs were also assigned to Operation Dragoon, the invasion of southern France, with a few units from Normandy participating there too.

With Europe invaded Admiral Turner requisitioned all available NCDUs from Fort Pierce for integration into the UDTs for the Pacific. However, the first NCDUs, 1–10, had been staged at Turner City, Florida Island in the Solomon Islands during January 1944.[18] A few were temporarily attached to UDTs.[18] Later NCDUs 1–10 were combined to form Underwater Demolition Team Able.[18] This team was disbanded with NCDUs 2 and 3, plus three others assigned to MacArthur's 7th Amphibious force, and were the only NCDUs remaining at war's end. The other men from Team Able were assigned to numbered UDTs.

Underwater Demolition Teams During WWII

The first units designated as Underwater Demolition Teams were formed in the Pacific Theater. Rear Admiral Turner, the Navy's amphibious expert, ordered the formation of Underwater Demolition Teams in response to the assault debacle experienced at Tarawa. Turner recognized that amphibious operations required intelligence of underwater obstacles .[7] The personnel in teams 1-15 were primarily Seabees that had started out in the NCDUs. UDT training was at the Waipio Amphibious Operating Base, under V Amphibious Corps operational and administrative control. Most of the instructors and trainees were graduates of the Fort Pierce NCDU or Scouts and Raiders schools, Seabees, Marines, and Army soldiers.[citation needed]

When Teams 1 and 2 were formed they were "provisional" and trained by a Marine Corps Amphibious Reconnaissance Battalion that had nothing to do with the Fort Pierce program. After a successful mission at Kwajalein, where 2 UDT men stripped down to swim trunks and effectively gathered the intelligence Admiral Turner desired. As a result of their actions the UDT mission model evolved to daylight reconnaissance, wearing swim trunks, fins, and masks. The immediate success of the UDTs made them an indispensable part of all future amphibious landings.

A UDT was organized with approximately sixteen officers and eighty enlisted. One Marine and one Army officer were liaisons within each team[19] They were deployed in every major amphibious landing after Tarawa with 34 teams eventually being commissioned. Teams 1–21 were the teams that had deployed operationally, with slightly over half of the Officers and enlisted coming from the Seabees in those teams. The remaining teams were not deployed due to the war ending.

Tarawa and the formation of UDTs

Prior to Tarawa, both Naval and Marine Corps planners had identified coral as an issue for amphibious operations. At Tarawa the neap tide created draft issues for the Higgins boats (LCVPs) clearing the reef. The Amtracs carrying the first wave crossed the reef successfully. The LCVPs carrying the second wave ran aground, disembarking their Marines several hundred yards to shore in full combat gear, under heavy fire. Many drowned or were killed before making the beach, forced to wade across treacherously uneven coral. The first wave was left fighting without reinforcements and took heavy casualties on the beach.

This disaster made it clear Admiral Turner that pre-assault intelligence was needed to avoid similar difficulties in future operations. To that end, Turner ordered the formation of underwater demolition teams to do reconnaissance of beach conditions and do removal of submerged obstructions for Amphibious operations.[7] After a thorough review, V Amphibious Corps found that the only people having any applicable experience with the coral were men in the Naval Construction Battalions. The Admiral tasked Lt. Thomas C. Crist (CEC) of CB 10 to develop a method for blasting coral under combat conditions and putting together a team for that purpose.[20] Lt. Crist started by recruiting others he had blasted coral with in CB 10 and by the end November 1943 he had assembled close to 30 officers and 150 enlisted men from the 7th Naval Construction Regiment,[5] at Waipio Amphibious Operating Base on Maui.[20]

Kwajalein and the evolution of the UDT mission model

 
Lt Luehrs was one of the 30 Officers from the 7th NCR that Lt. Crist staged for UDTs 1 & 2. He and Chief Acheson were the first UDT swimmers His Corps insignia would have had a Seabee on it.
 
ChCarp. W. H. Achenson CEC at Silver Star award ceremony for UDT 1 action
 
Seabees in both UDT 3 and UDT 4 made these welcome signs for the U.S. Marine Corps on Guam.

The first operation after Tarawa was Operation Flintlock in the Marshall Islands. It began with the island of Kwajalein in January 1944. Admiral Turner wanted the intelligence and to get it, the men that Lt. Crist had staged were used to form Underwater Demolition Teams: UDT 1 and UDT 2. Initially, the team commanders were Cmdr. E. D. Brewster (CEC) and Lt. Crist (CEC). However, Lt. Crist was made Ops officer of Team 2 and Lt. John T. Koehler was made the team Commander.[7] As with all Seabee military training the Marines provided it. A Marine Corps Amphibious Reconnaissance Battalion oversaw five weeks further training of the Seabees in UDTs 1 and 2 to prepare for the mission.[21] UDT 1 was tasked with two daylight recons.[22] The men were to follow Marine Corps Recon procedure with each two-man team getting close to the beach in a inflatable boats to make their observations wearing fatigues, boots, helmets, and life-lined to their boats. Team 1 found that the reef kept them from ascertaining conditions both in the water and on the beach as had been anticipated. In keeping with the Seabee traditions of: (1) doing whatever it takes to accomplish the job and (2) not always following military rules to get it done, UDT 1 did both, the fatigues and boots came off.

Ensign Lewis F. Luehrs and Seabee Chief Bill Acheson had anticipated that they would not be able to get the intell Admiral Turner wanted following USMC Recon protocol and had worn swim trunks beneath their fatigues.[22] Stripping down, they swam 45 minutes undetected across the reef returning with sketches of gun emplacements and other intelligence. Still in their trunks, they were taken directly to Rear Admiral Turner's flagship to report.[22] Afterwards, Rear Admiral Turner concluded that the only way to get this kind of information was to do what these men had done as individual swimmers, which is what he relayed to Admiral Nimitz. The planning and decisions of Rear Admiral Turner, Ensign Luehrs and Chief Acheson made Kwajalein a developmental day in UDT history, changing both the mission model and training regimen. Luehrs would make rank and be in UDT 3 until he was made XO of UDT 18. Acheson and three other UDT officers were posted to the 301st CB as blasting officers.[5] The 301st specialized in Harbor dredging. It saved UDT teams from blasting channels and Harbor clearance, but it required its own blasters.

Admiral Turner ordered the formation of nine teams, six for VAC and three for III Amphibious Corps. Seabees made up the majority of the men in teams 1–9, 13 and 15. The officers of those teams were primarily CEC[23] (Seabees). UDT 2 was sent to Roi-Namur where Lt. Crist would earn a Silver Star. UDTs 1 and 2 were decommissioned upon return to Hawaii with most the men transferred to UDTs 3, 4, 5, and 6. Admiral Turner ordered the formation of nine teams, three for III Amphibious Corps and six for V Amphibious Corps(in all teams 3–11). As more NCDUs arrived in the Pacific they were used to form even more teams. UDT 15 was an all NCDU team. In order to implement these changes and grow the UDTs, Koehler was made the commanding officer of the Naval Combat Demolition Training and Experimental Base on Maui. Admiral Turner also brought on LCDR Draper Kaufmann as a combat officer.[7]

It became obvious more men were needed than the NCDUs would supply and Cmdr. Kauffman was no longer recruiting Seabees, so Admiral Nimitz put out a call to the Pacific Fleet for volunteers. They would form three teams; UDT 14 would be the first of them. Recruiting was such an issue that three Lt. Cmdrs were transferred from USN Beach Battalions to command UDTs 11, 12, 13 that had no background in demolition.[citation needed]

Admiral Turner requested the establishment of the Naval Combat Demolition Training and Experimental Base at Kihei independent of Fort Pierce, expanding upon what had been learned from UDT 1 at Kwajalein. Operations began in February 1944 with Lt. Crist the first head of training. Most of the procedures from Fort Pierce were changed, replaced with an emphasis on developing swimmers, daylight reconnaissance, and no lifelines. The uniform of the day changed to diving masks, swim trunks, and a Ka-bar, creating the UDT image as "Naked Warriors" (swim-fins were added after UDT 10 introduced them).

Roi-Namur, Saipan, Tinian, and Guam

At Saipan and Tinian UDTs 5, 6, and 7 were given the missions: day time for Saipan and night for Tinian. At Saipan UDT 7 developed a method to recover swimmers on the move without making the recovery vessel a stationary target.

For Guam UDTs 3, 4, and 6 were the teams assigned. When it was over the Seabee-dominated teams had made naval history.[24] For the Marianas operations Admiral Turner recommended over sixty Silver Stars and over three hundred Bronze Stars with Vs for UDTs 3–7[24] That was unprecedented in U.S. Naval/Marine Corps history.[24]

For UDTs 5 and 7, all officers received silver stars and all the enlisted received bronze stars with Vs for Operation Forager (Tinian).[25] For UDTs 3 and 4 all officers received a silver stars and all the enlisted received bronze stars with Vs for Operation Forager (Guam).[25] Admiral Conolly felt the commanders of teams 3 and 4 (Lt. Crist and Lt. W.G. Carberry) should have received Navy Crosses.[25] Teams 4 & 7 also received Naval Unit Commendations.

Peleliu, Philippines, and Iwo Jima

UDTs 6, 7, and 10 drew the Peleliu[26] assignment while UDT 8 went to Angaur. The officers were almost all CEC and the enlisted were Seabees.[27]

At formation UDT 10 was assigned 5 officers and 24 enlisted that had trained as OSS Operational Swimmers.(Maritime Unit: Operational Swimmer Group II) They were led by a Lt. A.O. Chote Jr., who became UDT 10's commanding officer.The men were multi-service: Army, Coast Guard, Marine Corps and Navy.[28][29] but, the OSS was not allowed to operate in the Pacific Theater. Admiral Nimitz needed swimmers and did approve their transfer from the OSS to his operational and administrative control. Most of their OSS gear was stored as it was not applicable to UDT work however, their swimfins came with them. The other UDTs quickly adopted them.

UDT 14 was the first all-Navy team (one of three from the Pacific fleet) even though its CO and XO were CEC and some of Team Able was incorporated. In the Philippines Leyte Gulf UDTs 10 & 15 reconnoitered beaches at Luzon, teams 3, 4, 5, & 8 were sent to Dulag and teams 6, 9, & 10 went to Tacloban.

When UDT 3 returned to Maui the team was made the instructors of the school.[30] Lt Crist was again made Training Officer. Under his direction training was broken into four 2-week blocks with an emphasis on swimming and reconnaissance.[30] There were classes in night operations, unit control, coral and lava blasting in addition to bivouacking, small unit tactics and small arms.[30] Lt Crist would be promoted to Lt Cmdr and the team would remain in Hawaii until April 1945.[30] At that time the Seabees of UDT 3 were transferred to Fort Pierce to be the instructors there.[30] In all they would train teams 12 to 22.[30] Lt. Cmdr. Crist would be sent back to Hawaii.

D-minus 2 at Iwo Jima UDTs 12, 13, 14, and 15 reconnoitered the beaches from twelve LCI(G) with just one man wounded. They did come under intense heavy fire that sank three of their LCI(G) with the others seriously damaged of disabled. The LCI(G) crews suffered more than the UDTs with the skipper of one boat earning a Medal of Honor. The next day a Japanese bomb hit UDT 15's APD, USS Blessman killing fifteen and wounding 23. It was the largest loss suffered by the UDTs during the war.

On D-plus 2 the beachmaster requested help. There were so many broached or damaged landing craft and the beach was so clogged with war debris that there was no place for landing craft to get ashore. Lt Cmdr. E. Hochuli of UDT 12 volunteered his team to go deal with the problem and teams 13 and 14 were ordered to go with.[31] Lt Cmdr. Vincent Moranz of UDT 13 was "reluctant, and radioed that his men ... were not salvage-men.[31] It is reported that Capt. (Bull) Hanlon, Underwater Demolition Operations Commanding Officer radioed back that he did not want anything salvaged, he wanted that beach cleared."[31] The difference in attitude between Hochuli and Moranz would be remembered in the unit awards.

The three teams worked for five days clearing the waters edge. While the teams all did the same job under the same conditions[31] the Navy gave them different unit awards: UDT 12 a PUC, UDT 14 a NUC and UDT 13 nothing. The USMC ground commanders felt that every man that set foot on the island during the assault had an award coming. The Navy did not share this point of view, besides UDT 13 not a single USN beach party received a unit award either. On D-plus 2, when the UDTs set foot on beaches that were under a USMC assault, any unit award they received should have come under the USMC award protocol. The USMC Iwo Jima PUC/NUC was a mass award with the PUC going to assault units and the NUC going to support units.

UDTs also served at Eniwetok, Ulithi, Leyte, Lingayen Gulf, Zambales, Labuan, and Brunei Bay. At Lingayen UDT 9 was aboard the USS Belknap when she was hit by a Kamikaze. It cost the team one officer, 7 enlisted, 3 MIA and 13 wounded.

Okinawa to the end of the war

 
Beach reconnaissance map of Okinawa by Team 7

The largest UDT operation of WWII was the invasion of Okinawa, involving teams 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, and 18 (nearly 1,000 men). All prior missions had been in warm tropic waters but, the waters around Okinawa were cool enough that long immersion could cause hypothermia and severe cramps. Since thermal protection for swimmers was not available, UDTs were at risk to these hazards working around Okinawa.

Operations included both real reconnaissance and demolition at the landing beaches, and feints to create the illusion of landings in other locations. Pointed poles set into the coral reef protected the beaches on Okinawa. Teams 11 and 16 were sent in to blast the poles. The charges took out all of UDT 11's targets and half of UDT 16's. UDT 16 aborted the operation due to the death of one of their men; hence, their mission was considered a failure. UDT 11 went back the next day and took out the remaining poles after-which the team remained to guide landing-craft to the beach.

By war's end 34 teams had been formed with teams 1–21 having actually been deployed. The Seabees provided half of the men in the teams that saw service. The U.S. Navy did not publicize the existence of the UDTs until post war and when they did they gave credit to Lt. Commander Kauffman and the Seabees.[32]

During WWII the Navy did not have a rating for the UDTs nor did they have an insignia. Those men with the CB rating on their uniforms considered themselves Seabees that were doing underwater demolition. They did not call themselves "UDTs" or "Frogmen" but rather "Demolitioneers" which had carried over from the NCDUs[33] and LtCdr Kauffmans recruiting them from the Seabee dynamiting and demolition school. UDTs had to meet the military's standard age guidelines, Seabees older could not volunteer.

In preparation for the invasion of Japan the UDTs created a cold water training center and mid-1945 UDTs had to meet a "new physical standard". UDT 9 lost 70% of the team to this change. The last UDT demolition operation of the war was on 4 July 1945 at Balikpapan, Borneo. The UDTs continued to prepare for the invasion of Japan until VJ Day when the need for their services ceased.

With the draw-down from the war two half-strength UDTs were retained, one on each coast: UDT Baker and UDT Easy. However, the UDTs were the only special troops that avoided complete disbandment after the war, unlike the OSS Maritime Unit, the VAC Recon Battalion, and several Marine recon missions.[7]

In 1942 the Seabees became a completely new branch of the United States War Department. The Marine Corps provided both training and an organizational model. Something that either was not shared or the Seabees chose to ignore or considered not important was the keeping of logs, journals and records. The Seabees brought this record keeping approach with to the NCDUs and UDTs.

After World War II

Japan occupation

 
LtCmdr. Edward P. Clayton, (back to camera) Commanding Officer UDT 21, receiving the first sword surrendered to an American force in the Japanese Home islands, from a Japanese Army Coastal Artillery Major (opposite Clayton), at Futtsu-misaki Point, across Tokyo Bay from Yokosuka Naval Base, 28 August 1945. When word of this circulated LtCmdr. Clayton was ordered to give up the sword. Protocol dictated that General MacArthur should receive the first surrendered sword.

On 20 August 1945 USS Begor embarked UDT 21 at Guam as a component of the U.S. occupation force heading for Japan.[34] Nine days later UDT 21 became the first U.S military unit to set foot on Japanese home soil when it reconned the beaches at Futtsu-misaki Point in Tokyo Bay.[34] Their assessment was that the area was well suited for landing U.S. amphibious forces. UDT 21 made a large sign to greet the Marines on the beach. Team 21 was all fleet and the sign said greetings from "USN" UDT 21. The next day Begor took UDT 21 to Yokosuka Naval Base.[34] There the team cleared the docks for the first U.S. warship to dock in Japan, USS San Diego.[34] The team remained in Tokyo Bay until 8 Sept when it was tasked with locating remaining Kamikaze and two-man submarines at Katsura Wan, Uchiura Wan at Suruga Bay, Sendai, Onohama Shipyards and Choshi.[34] Orders arrived for Begor to return the team to San Diego on 27 September.[34]

From 21 to 26 September UDT 11 was at Nagasaki and reported men getting sick from the stench.[35]

China

With the war over thousands of Japanese troops remained in China. The issue was given to the Marine's III Marine Amphibious Corps. UDT 9 was assigned to Operation Beleaguer to recon the landings of the 1st Marine Division at Taku and Tsingtao the first two weeks of October 1945.[36] On their way to China the Navy had UDT 8 carry out a mission at Jinaen, Korea 8–27 September 1945.[36] When UDT 9 arrived back in the States it was made one of the two post-War teams and redesignated UDT Baker.[36]

UDT 8 was also sent to China and was at Taku, Chefoo, and Tsingtao.[37]

Operation Crossroads

Bikini atoll was chosen for the site of the nuclear tests of Operation Crossroads.

"In March 1946, Project Y scientists from Los Alamos decided that the analysis of a sample of water from the immediate vicinity of the nuclear detonation was essential if the tests were to be properly evaluated. After consideration of several proposals to accomplish this, it was finally decided to employ drone boats of the type used by Naval Combat Demolition Units in France during the war".[38]

UDT Easy, later named UDT 3, was given the designation TU 1.1.3 for the Operation and was assigned the control and maintenance of the drone boats. On 27 April, 7 officers and 51 enlisted men embarked the USS Begor at the Seabee base Port Hueneme, CA,[38] for transit to Bikini. At Bikini the drones were controlled from the Begor . Once a water sample was taken the drone would return to the Begor to be hosed down for decontamination. After a Radiation Safety Officer had taken a Geiger counter reading and the OK given, the UDTs would board with a radiation chemist to retrieve the sample.[39] Begor came to have the reputation as the most contaminated boat in the fleet.[39]

A major issue afterwards was the treatment of the dislocated natives. In November 1948, the Bikinians were relocated to the uninhabited Island of Kili, however that island was located inside a coral reef that had no channel for access to the sea.[40] In the spring of 1949, the Governor of the Trust Territories, Marshall Group requested the U.S. Navy blast a channel to change this.[40] That task was given to the Seabees on Kwajalin whose CO quickly determined this was actually a UDT project.[40] He sent a request to CINCPACFLT who forwarded it to COMPHIBPAC.[40] This ultimately resulted in the sending of UDT 3 on a Civic action program that turned out better than politicians could have hoped. The King of the Bikinians held a send off feast for the UDTs the night before they departed.[40]

Submersible Operations

Post WWII the UDTs continued to research new techniques for underwater and shallow-water operations. One area was the use of SCUBA equipment. Dr. Chris Lambertsen had developed the Lambertsen Amphibious Respiratory Unit (LARU), an oxygen rebreather, which was used by the Maritime Unit of the OSS. In October 1943, he demonstrated it to LtCmdr. Kauffman, but was told the device was not applicable to current UDT operations.[41][42] Dr. Lambertsen and the OSS continued to work on closed-circuit oxygen diving and combat swimming. When the OSS was dissolved in 1945, Lambertsen retained the LARU inventory. He later demonstrated the LARU to Army Engineers, the Coast Guard, and the UDTs. In 1947, he demonstrated the LARU to LtCmdr. Francis "Doug" Fane, then a senior UDT commander.[41][43] LtCmdr. Fane was enthusiastic for new diving techniques. He pushed for the adoption of rebreathers and SCUBA gear for future operations, but the Navy Experimental Diving Unit and the Navy Dive School, which used the old "hard-hat" diving apparatus, declared the new equipment be too dangerous. Nonetheless, LtCmdr. Fane invited Dr. Lambertsen to NAB Little Creek, Virginia in January 1948 to demonstrate and train UDT personnel in SCUBA operations. This was the first-ever SCUBA training for USN divers. Following this training, Lcdr. Fane and Dr. Lambertsen demonstrated new UDT capabilities with a successful lock-out and re-entry from USS Grouper, an underway submarine, to show the Navy's need for this capability. LtCmdr. Fane then started the classified "Submersible Operations" or SUBOPS platoon with men drawn from UDT 2 and 4 under the direction of Lieutenant (junior grade) Bruce Dunning.[41][44]

LtCmdr. Fane also brought the conventional "Aqua-lung" open-circuit SCUBA system into use by the UDTs. Open-circuit SCUBA is less useful to combat divers, as the exhausted air produces a tell-tale trail of bubbles. However, in the early 1950s, the UDTs decided they preferred open-circuit SCUBA, and converted entirely to it. The remaining stock of LARUs was supposedly destroyed in a beach-party bonfire.[citation needed] Later on, the UDT reverted to closed-circuit SCUBA, using improved rebreathers developed by Dr. Lambertsen.

It was at this time that the UDTs, led by LtCmdr. Fane, established training facilities at Saint Thomas in the Virgin Islands.[45]

The UDTs also began developing weapons skills and procedures for commando operations on land in coastal regions. The UDTs 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 personnel though the back of the aircraft. Training this technique was discontinued following the death of a SEAL at NAB Coronado during a training exercise. Teams still utilize the Skyhook for equipment extraction and retain the combat capability for personnel if needed.

Korean War

During the Korean War, the UDTs operated on the coasts of North Korea, with their efforts initially focused on demolitions and mine disposal. Additionally, the UDT accompanied South Korean commandos on raids in the North to demolish railroad tunnels and bridges. The higher-ranking officers of the UDT frowned upon this activity 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 better-known missions include the transport of spies into North Korea, and the destruction of North Korean fishing nets.

A more traditional role for the UDT was in support of Operation CHROMITE, the amphibious landing at Inchon. UDT 1 and UDT 3 divers went in ahead of the landing craft, scouting mud flats, marking low points in the channel, clearing fouled propellers, and searching for mines. Four UDT personnel acted as wave-guides for the Marine landing.[46]

The UDT assisted in clearing mines in Wonsan harbor, under fire from enemy shore batteries. Two minesweepers were sunk in these operations. A UDT diver dove on the wreck of USS Pledge (AM-277), the first U.S. combat operation using SCUBA gear.

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 war began brewing to the south in Vietnam.[47]

 
Mercury space capsule recovery practice UDTs exiting SH-3A Sea King HS-6
 
Gemini 4 recover operations – S65-33491

NASA

 
Apollo 8 capsule being recovered by UDT-12, 1968

Initially, the splashdown of U.S. manned space capsules were unassisted.[48] That changed quickly after the second manned flight; when Mercury 11 hit the water following reentry, the hatch blew and she sank, nearly drowning Gus Grissom. All Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo space capsules were subsequently met by UDTs 11 or 12 upon splashdown. Before the hatch was opened, the UDTs would attach a flotation collar to the capsule and liferaft for the astronauts to safely exit the craft.[48]

Vietnam War

 
(USN 1109964F) UDT 12 maintaining UDT Seabee tradition 1965 at DaNang in 1965

The Navy entered the Vietnam War in 1958, when the UDTs delivered a small watercraft far up the Mekong River into Laos. In 1961, naval advisers started training South Vietnamese personnel in South Vietnam. The men were called the Liên Đoàn Người Nhái (LDNN) or Vietnamese Frogmen, which translates as "Frogmen Team".

 
UDT 11 awarded the Navy Unit Commendation in 1966
 
UDT 12 awarded the Navy Unit Commendation in 1967

UDT teams carried out hydrographic surveys in South Vietnam's coastal waters and reconnaissance missions of harbors, beaches and rivers often under hazardous conditions and enemy fire.[49]

Later, the UDTs supported the Amphibious Ready Groups operating on South Vietnam's rivers. UDTs manned riverine patrol craft and went ashore to demolish obstacles and enemy bunkers. They operated throughout South Vietnam, from the Mekong Delta (Sea Float), the Parrot's Beak and French canal AO's through I Corps and the Song Cui Dai estuary south of Da Nang.

Birth of Navy SEALs

In the mid-1950s, the Navy saw how the UDT's mission had expanded to a broad range of "unconventional warfare", but also that this clashed with the UDT's traditional focus on swimming and diving operations. It was therefore decided to create a new type of unit that would build on the UDT's elite qualities and water-borne expertise, but would add land combat skills, including parachute training and guerrilla/counterinsurgency operations.[50] These new teams would come to be known as the US Navy SEALs, an acronym for Sea, Air, and Land. Initially there was a lag in the unit's creation until President John F. Kennedy took office. Kennedy recognized the need for unconventional warfare, and supported the use of special operations forces against guerrilla activity. The Navy moved forward to establish its new special operations force and in January 1962 commissioned SEAL Team ONE in NAB Coronado and SEAL Team TWO at NAB Little Creek. UDT-11 & 12 were still active on the west coast and UDT-21 & 22 on the east coast. The SEALs quickly earned a reputation for valor and stealth in Vietnam, where they conducted clandestine raids in perilous territory. In May 1983, the remaining UDT teams were reorganized as SEAL teams. UDT 11 became SEAL Team Five and UDT 12 became Seal Delivery Vehicle Team One. UDT 21 became SEAL Team Four and UDT 22 became Seal Delivery Vehicle Team Two. A new team, SEAL Team Three was established in October 1983. Since then, teams of SEALs have taken on clandestine missions in war-torn regions around the world, tracking high-profile targets such as Panama's Manuel Noriega and Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar, and playing integral roles in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.[51][52]

Badge

UDT Badges
 
Officer Underwater Demolition Badge
 
Enlisted Underwater Demolition Badge

For those who served in an Underwater Demolition Team, the U.S. Navy authorized the Underwater Demolition operator badge in 1970. However, the UDT badge was phased out in 1971, a few months after it appeared, as was the silver badge for enlisted UDT/SEAL frogmen. After that, SEAL and UDT operators, both officer and enlisted, all wore the same gold Trident, as well as gold Navy jump wings.

Unit awards

The UDTs have received several unit citations and commendations. Members who participated in actions that merited the award are authorized to wear the medal or ribbon associated with the award on their uniform. Awards and decorations of the United States Armed Forces have different categories, (i.e. Service, Campaign, Unit, and Personal). Unit Citations are distinct from the other decorations.[53]

Naval Combat Demolition Force O (Omaha beach) Normandy

Naval Combat Demolition Force U (Utah beach) : Normandy

UDT 1

UDT 4

UDT 7

UDT 11

UDT 12

UDT 13

UDT 14

UDT 21

UDT 22

Fiction

See also

References

  1. ^ "Commemorating The Birthplace of UDT-SEAL Teams: Waimanalo, Hawaii | National Navy UDT-SEAL Museum". Navysealmuseum.com. 11 November 2013. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  2. ^ "SEAL History: Before the First Mercury Splashdown | National Navy UDT-SEAL Museum". Navysealmuseum.com. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d Cunningham, Chet (2004). The Frogmen of World War II: An Oral History of the U.S. Navy's Underwater Demolition Teams. Pocket Star. ISBN 978-0-7434-8216-5.
  4. ^ "Navy SEAL History". Retrieved 25 January 2008.
  5. ^ a b c Submarine Blasting, 301 Naval Construction Battalion Cruisebook, Seabee Museum Archives website, Jan. 2020, p.60, Port Hueneme ,CA. [1]/
  6. ^ a b "SEAL History: Origins of Naval Special Warfare-WWII | National Navy UDT-SEAL Museum". Navysealmuseum.com. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Milligan, Benjamin H (2021). By Water Beneath the Walls. United States: Bantam Books. pp. 143–186. ISBN 978-0-553-39219-7.
  8. ^ Blazich, Frank A. (12 May 2017). "This Week in Seabee History (Week of May 14)". Seabee Online. Navy Facilities Engineering Command. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  9. ^ Blazich, Frank A. (6 June 2014). "Opening Omaha Beach: Ensign Karnowski and NCDU-45". Seabee Online. Navy Facilities Engineering Command. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  10. ^ "Seal History: Origins of Naval Special Warfare – WWII". Navy Seal Museum Archives. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  11. ^ pp. 30–31 Dockery & Brutsman
  12. ^ p.34 Dockery, Kevin & Brutsman, Bud Navy SEALs A History of the Early Years Berkley Publishing 2001
  13. ^ "Naval Combat Demolition Units". SpecWarNet.net. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  14. ^ Erickson, Mark St. John (3 December 2017). "Training the Fighting Seabees of WWII at Camp Peary". Daily Press. Newport News, Virginia.
  15. ^ Hornfischer, James D. (2017). The Fleet at Flood Tide: America at Total War in the Pacific, 1944–1945. New York: Bantam Books. p. 44.
  16. ^ a b c d e Report on Naval Combat Demolition Units in Operation "Neptune" as part of Task Force 122, Submitted by: Lt.(jg) H. L. Blackwell, Jr. D-V(G), USNR, 5 July, 1944
  17. ^ "World War II Era Beach Obstacles and Hedgehogs from Original NCDU School | National Navy UDT-SEAL Museum". NavySealMuseum.com. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  18. ^ a b c Liptak, Eugene (2014). World War II US Navy Special Warfare Units. New York: Osprey Publishing. p. 25.
  19. ^ Commander, V Amphibious Corps to CinCPac, report, Underwater Demolition Teams, Recommendations Concerning-Based on Experience in Flintlock (Kwajalein), 2 June 1944, declassified from secret.
  20. ^ a b The Water Is Never Cold, James Douglas O'Dell, 2000, p. 132, Brassey's, 22841 Quicksilver Drive, Dulles, Va. 20166, ISBN 1-57488-275-9
  21. ^ Meyers, Bruce F. (2004). Swift, Silent, and Deadly: Marine Amphibious Reconnaissance in the Pacific, 1942–1945. Naval Institute Press.
  22. ^ a b c Hoyt, Edwin P. (1993). Seals at War. New York, New York: Dell Books. ISBN 9780307570062.
  23. ^ Blazich, Frank A. Jr. (12 September 2016). "This Week in Seabee History". Seabee Online. Navy Facilities Engineering Command.
  24. ^ a b c Bush, E.K. (2012). America's First Frogman: The Draper Kauffman Story. Naval Institute Press. p. 122. ISBN 978-1-61251-298-3. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  25. ^ a b c Naked Warriors, Cdr. Francis Douglas Fane USNR (Ret.), St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Ave, New York, NY 10010, 1996, pp. 122, 131, ISBN 0-312-95985-0
  26. ^ Amphibious Assault: Key to the World War II Battle for Peleliu, Toni L. Carrell, PhD, Office of Ocean Exploration and Research, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce web site [2]
  27. ^ This Week in Seabee History, Sept 10–17, for Sept 12, Seabee Magazine online
  28. ^ OSS in Action The Pacific and the Far East, Series: OSS Training in the National Parks and Service Abroad in World War II, Catoctin Mountain Park, Prince William Forest Park webpage, 8 August 2017, National Park Service, 1100 Ohio Drive, SW, Washington, DC 20242 [3]
  29. ^ OPERATIONAL SWIMMER GROUP NAMES IS FROM A LIST WITH THE OSS HONOR ARTICLE PAGE, Military Memories webpage [4]
  30. ^ a b c d e f "The Teams in World War II". View of the Rockies. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  31. ^ a b c d UDT 13, The Men From Fort Pierce(excerpts), Marvin Cooper, U. S. Naval Special Warfare Archives web-site [5]
  32. ^ Underwater Demolition, "All Hands", The Bureau of Naval Personal Information Bulletin, October 1945, NAVPERS-0 NUMBER 343 pp. 12–15 [6]
  33. ^ NCDU 216 Photo, National Navy UDT–SEAL Museum, North Hutchinson Island, Fort Pierce, FL.
  34. ^ a b c d e f USS BEGOR (APD-127) veterans webpage
  35. ^ UDT 11, U. S. Naval Special Warfare Archives web site, "The Men From Fort Pierce" by Marvin Cooper [7]
  36. ^ a b c UNDERWATER DEMOLITION TEAM HISTORIES, WWII UDT TEAM NINE, compiled by Robert Allan King for the UDT-SEAL Museum from public records at the Operational Archives of the Naval Historical Center, U. S. Naval Special Warfare Archives web-site [8]
  37. ^ UNDERWATER DEMOLITION TEAM HISTORIES, WWII UDT TEAM EIGHT, compiled by Robert Allan King for the UDT-SEAL Museum from public records at the Operational Archives of the Naval Historical Center, U. S. Naval Special Warfare Archives web-site [9]
  38. ^ a b Operations Crossroads, DNA 6032F, prepared by the Defense Nuclear Agency, p.189-90
  39. ^ a b USS BEGOR (APD-127) Veterans webpage
  40. ^ a b c d e U.S. Naval Special Warfare Archives, After Operation Crossroads – Kili Island, Mack M. Boynton, December 21, 2013
  41. ^ a b c Butler FK (2004). . Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine. 31 (1): 3–20. PMID 15233156. Archived from the original on 13 June 2008. Retrieved 18 March 2009.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  42. ^ Hawkins T (2000). "OSS Maritime". The Blast. 32 (1).
  43. ^ Vann RD (2004). . Undersea Hyperb Med. 31 (1): 21–31. PMID 15233157. Archived from the original on 13 June 2008. Retrieved 18 March 2009.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  44. ^ Vann RD (Spring 2000). "The evolution of diving in UDT from WW II through Korea". Fire-in-the-Hole.
  45. ^ "CDR Doug Fane, Navy Udt leader". bigislandforum.org. Retrieved 6 December 2009.
  46. ^ "SEAL History: Underwater Demolition Teams in the Korean War | National Navy UDT-SEAL Museum". Navysealmuseum.com. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  47. ^ "Navy UDT-SEAL Museum: History, Korea". navysealmuseum.com. Retrieved 25 January 2008.
  48. ^ a b UDTs and the Space Flight Programs, UDT Navy Seal Museum Archives website, Fort Pierce, FL [10]
  49. ^ . Navysealmuseum.com. Archived from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  50. ^ Boynton, Mack (2010). A Founding Father of the Navy SEALs (PDF).
  51. ^ Altman, Alex (27 April 2009). . Time Magazine. Archived from the original on 18 April 2009. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  52. ^ Mack Boynton (2007). "SEAL Story of – SEAL Teams". The Blast. UDT-SEAL Association. Retrieved 6 December 2009.
  53. ^ List of Award Abbreviations, Chief of Naval Operations, 2000 Navy Pentagon, Washington, D.C. 20350
  54. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Naval History and Heritage Command website, Part 2 – Unit Awards, Published:Mon Aug 31 14:01:11 EDT 2015, p. 22
  55. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v US Navy Awards, Chief of Naval Operations, 2000 Navy Pentagon, Washington, D.C. 20350
  56. ^ a b US Navy Awards, Chief of Naval Operations, 2000 Navy Pentagon, Washington, D.C. 20350
  57. ^ a b c d e US Navy Awards, Chief of Naval Operations, 2000 Navy Pentagon, Washington, D.C. 20350
  58. ^ US Navy Awards, Chief of Naval Operations, 2000 Navy Pentagon, Washington, D.C. 20350
  59. ^ OPNAV NOTICE 1650, MASTER LIST OF UNIT AWARDS AND CAMPAIGN MEDALS, DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY, OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS, 2000 NAVY PENTAGON, WASHINGTON, DC 20350-2000, 18 September 2002

Further reading

  • Best, Herbert. The Webfoot Warriors; The Story of UDT, the U.S. Navy's Underwater Demolition Team. New York: John Day Co, 1962. OCLC 1315014
  • Fane, Francis Douglas, and Don Moore. The Naked Warriors: The Story of the U.S. Navy's Frogmen. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1995. ISBN 1557502668 OCLC 33007811
  • O'Dell, James Douglas. The Water Is Never Cold: The Origins of the U.S. Navy's Combat Demolition Units, UDTs, and SEALs. Washington, DC: Brassey's, 2000. ISBN 1574882759 OCLC 44764036
  • Young, Darryl. SEALs, UDT, Frogmen: Men Under Pressure. New York: Ivy Books, 1994. ISBN 0804110646 OCLC 31815574
  • Milligan, Benjamin H. By Water Beneath The Walls. New York: Bantam Books, 2021. ISBN 978-0-553-39219-7

External links

  • Navy UDT-SEAL Museum
  • NavyFrogMen.com U. S. Naval Special Warfare Archives
  • Pritzker Military Museum & Library
  • "TNT Divers" Popular Mechanics, November 1945, pp. 72–73, one of earliest articles on WW2 UDT units.

underwater, demolition, team, frogmen, were, amphibious, units, created, united, states, navy, during, world, with, specialized, tactical, missions, they, were, predecessors, navy, current, seal, teams, spatch, active15, august, 1942, present, seals, countryun. Underwater Demolition Teams UDT or frogmen were amphibious units created by the United States Navy during World War II with specialized non tactical missions They were predecessors of the navy s current SEAL teams Underwater Demolition TeamsPatch of the Underwater Demolition Teams Active15 August 1942 present as SEALs CountryUnited StatesBranchUnited States NavyTypeAmphibious warfareRoleDirect action Underwater demolition Special reconnaissance Seaborne infiltration and exfiltrationGarrison HQFort Pierce Florida U S Maui Hawaii U S Nickname s UDT FrogmenEngagementsOperation OverlordOperation TorchBattle of KwajaleinBattle of Roi NamurBattle of SaipanBattle of TinianBattle of GuamBattle of PeleliuBattle of Iwo JimaBattle of OkinawaBorneo campaignBattle of LeyteInvasion of Lingayen GulfOperation BeleaguerKorean WarVietnam War UDT Memorial at Bellows AFB photographed in October 2016 1 Their primary WWII function began with reconnaissance and underwater demolition of natural or man made obstacles obstructing amphibious landings Postwar they transitioned to scuba gear changing their capabilities With that they came to be considered more elite and tactical during the Korean and Vietnam Wars UDTs were pioneers in underwater demolition closed circuit diving combat swimming and midget submarine dry and wet submersible operations They later were tasked with ensuring recovery of space capsules and astronauts after splash down in the Mercury Gemini and Apollo space flight programs 2 Commando training was added making them the forerunner to the United States Navy SEAL program that exists today 3 In 1983 after additional SEAL training the UDTs were re designated as SEAL Teams or Swimmer Delivery Vehicle Teams SDVTs SDVTs have since been re designated SEAL Delivery Vehicle Teams 4 Contents 1 Early history 2 Naval Combat Demolition Units 2 1 Normandy 3 Underwater Demolition Teams During WWII 3 1 Tarawa and the formation of UDTs 3 2 Kwajalein and the evolution of the UDT mission model 3 3 Roi Namur Saipan Tinian and Guam 3 4 Peleliu Philippines and Iwo Jima 3 5 Okinawa to the end of the war 4 After World War II 4 1 Japan occupation 4 2 China 4 3 Operation Crossroads 4 4 Submersible Operations 5 Korean War 6 NASA 7 Vietnam War 8 Birth of Navy SEALs 9 Badge 10 Unit awards 11 Fiction 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly history EditThe United States Navy studied the problems encountered by the disastrous Allied amphibious landings during the Gallipoli Campaign of World War I This contributed to the development and experimentation of new landing techniques in the mid 1930s In August 1941 landing trials were performed and one hazardous operation led to Army Second Lieutenant Lloyd E Peddicord being assigned the task of analyzing the need for a human intelligence HUMINT capability 3 When the U S entered World War II the Navy realized that in order to strike at the Axis powers the U S forces would need to perform a large number of amphibious attacks The Navy decided that men would have to go in to reconnoiter the landing beaches locate obstacles and defenses as well as guide the landing forces ashore In August 1942 Peddicord set up a recon school for his new unit Navy Scouts and Raiders at the amphibious training base at Little Creek Virginia 3 In 1942 the Army and Navy jointly established the Amphibious Scout and Raider School at Fort Pierce Florida Here Lieutenant Commander Phil H Bucklew the Father of Naval Special Warfare helped organize and train what became the Navy s first group to specialize in amphibious raids and tactics The need for intelligence gathering prior to landings became paramount following the amphibious assault at the Battle of Tarawa in November 1943 Although Navy and Marine Corps planners had identified coral as an issue they incorrectly assumed landing craft would be able to crawl over the coral Marines were forced to exit their craft in chest deep water a thousand yards from shore with many men drowning due to the irregularities of the reefs and Japanese gunners inflicting heavy U S casualties 3 After that experience Rear admiral Kelley Turner Commander of the V Amphibious Corps VAC directed Seabee Lt Crist CEC to come up with a means to deal with the coral and the men to do it Lt Crist staged 30 officers and 150 enlisted men from the 7th Naval Construction Regiment 5 at Waipio Amphibious Operating Base on Oahu to form the nucleus of a reconnaissance and demolition training program It is here that the UDTs of the Pacific were born 6 7 Later in war the Army Engineers passed down demolition jobs to the U S Navy It then became the Navy s responsibility to clear any obstacles and defenses in the near shore area citation needed A memorial to the founding of the UDT has been built at Bellows Air Force Station near the original Amphibious Training Base ATB in Oahu Naval Combat Demolition Units Edit U S Naval Combat Demolition insignia U S Navy Seal Museum In early May 1943 a two phase Naval Demolition Project was ordered by the Chief of Naval Operations CNO to meet a present and urgent requirement The first phase began at Amphibious Training Base ATB Solomons Maryland with the establishment of Operational Naval Demolition Unit No 1 Six Officers and eighteen enlisted men reported from the Seabees dynamiting and demolition school at Camp Peary for a four week course 8 9 Those Seabees were immediately sent to participate in the invasion of Sicily 10 where they were divided in three groups that landed on the beaches near Licata Gela and Scoglitti 11 Also in May the Navy created a Naval Combat Demolition Units NCDUs tasked with eliminating beach obstructions in advance of amphibious assaults going ashore in an LCRS inflatable boat 12 Each NCDU consisted of five enlisted men led by a single junior CEC officer In early May Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Ernest J King picked Lieutenant Commander Draper L Kauffman to lead the training The first six classes graduated from Area E at the Seabee s Camp Peary between May and mid July 13 Training was moved to Fort Pierce Florida where the first class began mid July 1943 Despite the move and having the Scouts Raiders base close by Camp Peary was Kauffman s primary source of recruits He would go up to Camp Peary s Dynamite School and assemble the Seabees in the auditorium saying I need volunteers for hazardous prolonged and distant duty 14 Kauffman s other volunteers came from the U S Marines and U S Army combat engineers Training commenced with one grueling week designed to separate the men from the boys Some said that the men had sense enough to quit leaving Kauffman with the boys 15 It was and is still considered the first Hell Week Normandy Edit In early November 1943 NCDU 11 was assigned as the advance NCDU party for Operation Overlord They would be joined in England by 33 more NCDUs They trained with the 146th 277th and 299th Combat Engineers to prepare for the landing 16 Each Unit had five Combat engineers attached to it The first 10 NCDUs divided into three groups 16 The senior officer by rank was the commanding officer of Group III Lieutenant Smith CEC He assumed command in an unofficial capacity 16 His Group III worked on experimental demolitions and developed the Hagensen Pack 16 an innovation that used 2 5 pound 1 1 kg of tetryl placed into rubber tubes that could be twisted around obstacles 17 As more teams arrived a NCDU Command was created for NCDUs 11 22 30 41 46 127 8 130 42 16 NCDU 45 Ensign Karnowski Chief Carpenters Mate Conrad C Millis MMCB2 Lester Meyers and three gunners mates The unit received a Presidential Unit Citation with Ens Karnowski earning the Navy Cross amp French Croix de Guerre with Palm while MM2 Meyers received a Silver Star Two men were wounded and one was killed 80 G 258013 At Morotai NCDU 21 with MacArthur s 7th Fleet makes a channel using 8 tons of explosives in a single blast Debris was thrown 800 yards or nearly a half mile The Germans had constructed elaborate defenses on the French coast These included steel posts driven into the beach and topped with explosive charges Large 3 ton steel barricades called Belgian Gates and hedgehogs were placed throughout the tidal zone Behind which was a network of reinforced coastal artillery mortar and machine gun positions 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 NCDUs to practice demolitions on It was possible to blow a gate to pieces but that only created a mass of tangled iron creating more of an obstacle The NCDUs found that the best method was to blast the structural joints of a gate so that it fell down flat The NCDU teams designated Demolitions Gap Assault teams would come in at low tide to clear the obstacles Their mission was to open sixteen 50 foot 15 m wide corridors for the landing at each of the U S landing zones Omaha Beach and Utah Beach Unfortunately the plans were not executed as laid out The preparatory air and naval bombardment was ineffective leaving many German guns to fire on the assault Also tidal conditions caused difficulties for the NCDUs Despite heavy German fire and casualties the NCDUs charges opened gaps in the defenses As the infantry came ashore some used obstacles for cover that had demolition charges on them The greatest difficulty was on Omaha Beach By nightfall thirteen of the planned sixteen gaps were open Of the 175 NCDU men that landed 31 were killed and 60 were wounded The attack on Utah Beach was better four dead and eleven wounded 6 Overall NCDUs suffered a 53 percent casualty rate NCDUs were also assigned to Operation Dragoon the invasion of southern France with a few units from Normandy participating there too With Europe invaded Admiral Turner requisitioned all available NCDUs from Fort Pierce for integration into the UDTs for the Pacific However the first NCDUs 1 10 had been staged at Turner City Florida Island in the Solomon Islands during January 1944 18 A few were temporarily attached to UDTs 18 Later NCDUs 1 10 were combined to form Underwater Demolition Team Able 18 This team was disbanded with NCDUs 2 and 3 plus three others assigned to MacArthur s 7th Amphibious force and were the only NCDUs remaining at war s end The other men from Team Able were assigned to numbered UDTs Underwater Demolition Teams During WWII EditThe first units designated as Underwater Demolition Teams were formed in the Pacific Theater Rear Admiral Turner the Navy s amphibious expert ordered the formation of Underwater Demolition Teams in response to the assault debacle experienced at Tarawa Turner recognized that amphibious operations required intelligence of underwater obstacles 7 The personnel in teams 1 15 were primarily Seabees that had started out in the NCDUs UDT training was at the Waipio Amphibious Operating Base under V Amphibious Corps operational and administrative control Most of the instructors and trainees were graduates of the Fort Pierce NCDU or Scouts and Raiders schools Seabees Marines and Army soldiers citation needed When Teams 1 and 2 were formed they were provisional and trained by a Marine Corps Amphibious Reconnaissance Battalion that had nothing to do with the Fort Pierce program After a successful mission at Kwajalein where 2 UDT men stripped down to swim trunks and effectively gathered the intelligence Admiral Turner desired As a result of their actions the UDT mission model evolved to daylight reconnaissance wearing swim trunks fins and masks The immediate success of the UDTs made them an indispensable part of all future amphibious landings A UDT was organized with approximately sixteen officers and eighty enlisted One Marine and one Army officer were liaisons within each team 19 They were deployed in every major amphibious landing after Tarawa with 34 teams eventually being commissioned Teams 1 21 were the teams that had deployed operationally with slightly over half of the Officers and enlisted coming from the Seabees in those teams The remaining teams were not deployed due to the war ending Tarawa and the formation of UDTs Edit Prior to Tarawa both Naval and Marine Corps planners had identified coral as an issue for amphibious operations At Tarawa the neap tide created draft issues for the Higgins boats LCVPs clearing the reef The Amtracs carrying the first wave crossed the reef successfully The LCVPs carrying the second wave ran aground disembarking their Marines several hundred yards to shore in full combat gear under heavy fire Many drowned or were killed before making the beach forced to wade across treacherously uneven coral The first wave was left fighting without reinforcements and took heavy casualties on the beach This disaster made it clear Admiral Turner that pre assault intelligence was needed to avoid similar difficulties in future operations To that end Turner ordered the formation of underwater demolition teams to do reconnaissance of beach conditions and do removal of submerged obstructions for Amphibious operations 7 After a thorough review V Amphibious Corps found that the only people having any applicable experience with the coral were men in the Naval Construction Battalions The Admiral tasked Lt Thomas C Crist CEC of CB 10 to develop a method for blasting coral under combat conditions and putting together a team for that purpose 20 Lt Crist started by recruiting others he had blasted coral with in CB 10 and by the end November 1943 he had assembled close to 30 officers and 150 enlisted men from the 7th Naval Construction Regiment 5 at Waipio Amphibious Operating Base on Maui 20 Kwajalein and the evolution of the UDT mission model Edit Lt Luehrs was one of the 30 Officers from the 7th NCR that Lt Crist staged for UDTs 1 amp 2 He and Chief Acheson were the first UDT swimmers His Corps insignia would have had a Seabee on it ChCarp W H Achenson CEC at Silver Star award ceremony for UDT 1 action Seabees in both UDT 3 and UDT 4 made these welcome signs for the U S Marine Corps on Guam The first operation after Tarawa was Operation Flintlock in the Marshall Islands It began with the island of Kwajalein in January 1944 Admiral Turner wanted the intelligence and to get it the men that Lt Crist had staged were used to form Underwater Demolition Teams UDT 1 and UDT 2 Initially the team commanders were Cmdr E D Brewster CEC and Lt Crist CEC However Lt Crist was made Ops officer of Team 2 and Lt John T Koehler was made the team Commander 7 As with all Seabee military training the Marines provided it A Marine Corps Amphibious Reconnaissance Battalion oversaw five weeks further training of the Seabees in UDTs 1 and 2 to prepare for the mission 21 UDT 1 was tasked with two daylight recons 22 The men were to follow Marine Corps Recon procedure with each two man team getting close to the beach in a inflatable boats to make their observations wearing fatigues boots helmets and life lined to their boats Team 1 found that the reef kept them from ascertaining conditions both in the water and on the beach as had been anticipated In keeping with the Seabee traditions of 1 doing whatever it takes to accomplish the job and 2 not always following military rules to get it done UDT 1 did both the fatigues and boots came off Ensign Lewis F Luehrs and Seabee Chief Bill Acheson had anticipated that they would not be able to get the intell Admiral Turner wanted following USMC Recon protocol and had worn swim trunks beneath their fatigues 22 Stripping down they swam 45 minutes undetected across the reef returning with sketches of gun emplacements and other intelligence Still in their trunks they were taken directly to Rear Admiral Turner s flagship to report 22 Afterwards Rear Admiral Turner concluded that the only way to get this kind of information was to do what these men had done as individual swimmers which is what he relayed to Admiral Nimitz The planning and decisions of Rear Admiral Turner Ensign Luehrs and Chief Acheson made Kwajalein a developmental day in UDT history changing both the mission model and training regimen Luehrs would make rank and be in UDT 3 until he was made XO of UDT 18 Acheson and three other UDT officers were posted to the 301st CB as blasting officers 5 The 301st specialized in Harbor dredging It saved UDT teams from blasting channels and Harbor clearance but it required its own blasters Admiral Turner ordered the formation of nine teams six for VAC and three for III Amphibious Corps Seabees made up the majority of the men in teams 1 9 13 and 15 The officers of those teams were primarily CEC 23 Seabees UDT 2 was sent to Roi Namur where Lt Crist would earn a Silver Star UDTs 1 and 2 were decommissioned upon return to Hawaii with most the men transferred to UDTs 3 4 5 and 6 Admiral Turner ordered the formation of nine teams three for III Amphibious Corps and six for V Amphibious Corps in all teams 3 11 As more NCDUs arrived in the Pacific they were used to form even more teams UDT 15 was an all NCDU team In order to implement these changes and grow the UDTs Koehler was made the commanding officer of the Naval Combat Demolition Training and Experimental Base on Maui Admiral Turner also brought on LCDR Draper Kaufmann as a combat officer 7 It became obvious more men were needed than the NCDUs would supply and Cmdr Kauffman was no longer recruiting Seabees so Admiral Nimitz put out a call to the Pacific Fleet for volunteers They would form three teams UDT 14 would be the first of them Recruiting was such an issue that three Lt Cmdrs were transferred from USN Beach Battalions to command UDTs 11 12 13 that had no background in demolition citation needed Admiral Turner requested the establishment of the Naval Combat Demolition Training and Experimental Base at Kihei independent of Fort Pierce expanding upon what had been learned from UDT 1 at Kwajalein Operations began in February 1944 with Lt Crist the first head of training Most of the procedures from Fort Pierce were changed replaced with an emphasis on developing swimmers daylight reconnaissance and no lifelines The uniform of the day changed to diving masks swim trunks and a Ka bar creating the UDT image as Naked Warriors swim fins were added after UDT 10 introduced them Roi Namur Saipan Tinian and Guam Edit At Saipan and Tinian UDTs 5 6 and 7 were given the missions day time for Saipan and night for Tinian At Saipan UDT 7 developed a method to recover swimmers on the move without making the recovery vessel a stationary target For Guam UDTs 3 4 and 6 were the teams assigned When it was over the Seabee dominated teams had made naval history 24 For the Marianas operations Admiral Turner recommended over sixty Silver Stars and over three hundred Bronze Stars with Vs for UDTs 3 7 24 That was unprecedented in U S Naval Marine Corps history 24 For UDTs 5 and 7 all officers received silver stars and all the enlisted received bronze stars with Vs for Operation Forager Tinian 25 For UDTs 3 and 4 all officers received a silver stars and all the enlisted received bronze stars with Vs for Operation Forager Guam 25 Admiral Conolly felt the commanders of teams 3 and 4 Lt Crist and Lt W G Carberry should have received Navy Crosses 25 Teams 4 amp 7 also received Naval Unit Commendations Peleliu Philippines and Iwo Jima Edit UDTs 6 7 and 10 drew the Peleliu 26 assignment while UDT 8 went to Angaur The officers were almost all CEC and the enlisted were Seabees 27 At formation UDT 10 was assigned 5 officers and 24 enlisted that had trained as OSS Operational Swimmers Maritime Unit Operational Swimmer Group II They were led by a Lt A O Chote Jr who became UDT 10 s commanding officer The men were multi service Army Coast Guard Marine Corps and Navy 28 29 but the OSS was not allowed to operate in the Pacific Theater Admiral Nimitz needed swimmers and did approve their transfer from the OSS to his operational and administrative control Most of their OSS gear was stored as it was not applicable to UDT work however their swimfins came with them The other UDTs quickly adopted them UDT 14 was the first all Navy team one of three from the Pacific fleet even though its CO and XO were CEC and some of Team Able was incorporated In the Philippines Leyte Gulf UDTs 10 amp 15 reconnoitered beaches at Luzon teams 3 4 5 amp 8 were sent to Dulag and teams 6 9 amp 10 went to Tacloban When UDT 3 returned to Maui the team was made the instructors of the school 30 Lt Crist was again made Training Officer Under his direction training was broken into four 2 week blocks with an emphasis on swimming and reconnaissance 30 There were classes in night operations unit control coral and lava blasting in addition to bivouacking small unit tactics and small arms 30 Lt Crist would be promoted to Lt Cmdr and the team would remain in Hawaii until April 1945 30 At that time the Seabees of UDT 3 were transferred to Fort Pierce to be the instructors there 30 In all they would train teams 12 to 22 30 Lt Cmdr Crist would be sent back to Hawaii D minus 2 at Iwo Jima UDTs 12 13 14 and 15 reconnoitered the beaches from twelve LCI G with just one man wounded They did come under intense heavy fire that sank three of their LCI G with the others seriously damaged of disabled The LCI G crews suffered more than the UDTs with the skipper of one boat earning a Medal of Honor The next day a Japanese bomb hit UDT 15 s APD USS Blessman killing fifteen and wounding 23 It was the largest loss suffered by the UDTs during the war On D plus 2 the beachmaster requested help There were so many broached or damaged landing craft and the beach was so clogged with war debris that there was no place for landing craft to get ashore Lt Cmdr E Hochuli of UDT 12 volunteered his team to go deal with the problem and teams 13 and 14 were ordered to go with 31 Lt Cmdr Vincent Moranz of UDT 13 was reluctant and radioed that his men were not salvage men 31 It is reported that Capt Bull Hanlon Underwater Demolition Operations Commanding Officer radioed back that he did not want anything salvaged he wanted that beach cleared 31 The difference in attitude between Hochuli and Moranz would be remembered in the unit awards The three teams worked for five days clearing the waters edge While the teams all did the same job under the same conditions 31 the Navy gave them different unit awards UDT 12 a PUC UDT 14 a NUC and UDT 13 nothing The USMC ground commanders felt that every man that set foot on the island during the assault had an award coming The Navy did not share this point of view besides UDT 13 not a single USN beach party received a unit award either On D plus 2 when the UDTs set foot on beaches that were under a USMC assault any unit award they received should have come under the USMC award protocol The USMC Iwo Jima PUC NUC was a mass award with the PUC going to assault units and the NUC going to support units UDTs also served at Eniwetok Ulithi Leyte Lingayen Gulf Zambales Labuan and Brunei Bay At Lingayen UDT 9 was aboard the USS Belknap when she was hit by a Kamikaze It cost the team one officer 7 enlisted 3 MIA and 13 wounded Okinawa to the end of the war Edit Beach reconnaissance map of Okinawa by Team 7 The largest UDT operation of WWII was the invasion of Okinawa involving teams 7 11 12 13 14 16 17 and 18 nearly 1 000 men All prior missions had been in warm tropic waters but the waters around Okinawa were cool enough that long immersion could cause hypothermia and severe cramps Since thermal protection for swimmers was not available UDTs were at risk to these hazards working around Okinawa Operations included both real reconnaissance and demolition at the landing beaches and feints to create the illusion of landings in other locations Pointed poles set into the coral reef protected the beaches on Okinawa Teams 11 and 16 were sent in to blast the poles The charges took out all of UDT 11 s targets and half of UDT 16 s UDT 16 aborted the operation due to the death of one of their men hence their mission was considered a failure UDT 11 went back the next day and took out the remaining poles after which the team remained to guide landing craft to the beach By war s end 34 teams had been formed with teams 1 21 having actually been deployed The Seabees provided half of the men in the teams that saw service The U S Navy did not publicize the existence of the UDTs until post war and when they did they gave credit to Lt Commander Kauffman and the Seabees 32 During WWII the Navy did not have a rating for the UDTs nor did they have an insignia Those men with the CB rating on their uniforms considered themselves Seabees that were doing underwater demolition They did not call themselves UDTs or Frogmen but rather Demolitioneers which had carried over from the NCDUs 33 and LtCdr Kauffmans recruiting them from the Seabee dynamiting and demolition school UDTs had to meet the military s standard age guidelines Seabees older could not volunteer In preparation for the invasion of Japan the UDTs created a cold water training center and mid 1945 UDTs had to meet a new physical standard UDT 9 lost 70 of the team to this change The last UDT demolition operation of the war was on 4 July 1945 at Balikpapan Borneo The UDTs continued to prepare for the invasion of Japan until VJ Day when the need for their services ceased With the draw down from the war two half strength UDTs were retained one on each coast UDT Baker and UDT Easy However the UDTs were the only special troops that avoided complete disbandment after the war unlike the OSS Maritime Unit the VAC Recon Battalion and several Marine recon missions 7 In 1942 the Seabees became a completely new branch of the United States War Department The Marine Corps provided both training and an organizational model Something that either was not shared or the Seabees chose to ignore or considered not important was the keeping of logs journals and records The Seabees brought this record keeping approach with to the NCDUs and UDTs After World War II EditJapan occupation Edit LtCmdr Edward P Clayton back to camera Commanding Officer UDT 21 receiving the first sword surrendered to an American force in the Japanese Home islands from a Japanese Army Coastal Artillery Major opposite Clayton at Futtsu misaki Point across Tokyo Bay from Yokosuka Naval Base 28 August 1945 When word of this circulated LtCmdr Clayton was ordered to give up the sword Protocol dictated that General MacArthur should receive the first surrendered sword On 20 August 1945 USS Begor embarked UDT 21 at Guam as a component of the U S occupation force heading for Japan 34 Nine days later UDT 21 became the first U S military unit to set foot on Japanese home soil when it reconned the beaches at Futtsu misaki Point in Tokyo Bay 34 Their assessment was that the area was well suited for landing U S amphibious forces UDT 21 made a large sign to greet the Marines on the beach Team 21 was all fleet and the sign said greetings from USN UDT 21 The next day Begor took UDT 21 to Yokosuka Naval Base 34 There the team cleared the docks for the first U S warship to dock in Japan USS San Diego 34 The team remained in Tokyo Bay until 8 Sept when it was tasked with locating remaining Kamikaze and two man submarines at Katsura Wan Uchiura Wan at Suruga Bay Sendai Onohama Shipyards and Choshi 34 Orders arrived for Begor to return the team to San Diego on 27 September 34 From 21 to 26 September UDT 11 was at Nagasaki and reported men getting sick from the stench 35 China Edit With the war over thousands of Japanese troops remained in China The issue was given to the Marine s III Marine Amphibious Corps UDT 9 was assigned to Operation Beleaguer to recon the landings of the 1st Marine Division at Taku and Tsingtao the first two weeks of October 1945 36 On their way to China the Navy had UDT 8 carry out a mission at Jinaen Korea 8 27 September 1945 36 When UDT 9 arrived back in the States it was made one of the two post War teams and redesignated UDT Baker 36 UDT 8 was also sent to China and was at Taku Chefoo and Tsingtao 37 Operation Crossroads Edit Bikini atoll was chosen for the site of the nuclear tests of Operation Crossroads In March 1946 Project Y scientists from Los Alamos decided that the analysis of a sample of water from the immediate vicinity of the nuclear detonation was essential if the tests were to be properly evaluated After consideration of several proposals to accomplish this it was finally decided to employ drone boats of the type used by Naval Combat Demolition Units in France during the war 38 UDT Easy later named UDT 3 was given the designation TU 1 1 3 for the Operation and was assigned the control and maintenance of the drone boats On 27 April 7 officers and 51 enlisted men embarked the USS Begor at the Seabee base Port Hueneme CA 38 for transit to Bikini At Bikini the drones were controlled from the Begor Once a water sample was taken the drone would return to the Begor to be hosed down for decontamination After a Radiation Safety Officer had taken a Geiger counter reading and the OK given the UDTs would board with a radiation chemist to retrieve the sample 39 Begor came to have the reputation as the most contaminated boat in the fleet 39 A major issue afterwards was the treatment of the dislocated natives In November 1948 the Bikinians were relocated to the uninhabited Island of Kili however that island was located inside a coral reef that had no channel for access to the sea 40 In the spring of 1949 the Governor of the Trust Territories Marshall Group requested the U S Navy blast a channel to change this 40 That task was given to the Seabees on Kwajalin whose CO quickly determined this was actually a UDT project 40 He sent a request to CINCPACFLT who forwarded it to COMPHIBPAC 40 This ultimately resulted in the sending of UDT 3 on a Civic action program that turned out better than politicians could have hoped The King of the Bikinians held a send off feast for the UDTs the night before they departed 40 Submersible Operations Edit Post WWII the UDTs continued to research new techniques for underwater and shallow water operations One area was the use of SCUBA equipment Dr Chris Lambertsen had developed the Lambertsen Amphibious Respiratory Unit LARU an oxygen rebreather which was used by the Maritime Unit of the OSS In October 1943 he demonstrated it to LtCmdr Kauffman but was told the device was not applicable to current UDT operations 41 42 Dr Lambertsen and the OSS continued to work on closed circuit oxygen diving and combat swimming When the OSS was dissolved in 1945 Lambertsen retained the LARU inventory He later demonstrated the LARU to Army Engineers the Coast Guard and the UDTs In 1947 he demonstrated the LARU to LtCmdr Francis Doug Fane then a senior UDT commander 41 43 LtCmdr Fane was enthusiastic for new diving techniques He pushed for the adoption of rebreathers and SCUBA gear for future operations but the Navy Experimental Diving Unit and the Navy Dive School which used the old hard hat diving apparatus declared the new equipment be too dangerous Nonetheless LtCmdr Fane invited Dr Lambertsen to NAB Little Creek Virginia in January 1948 to demonstrate and train UDT personnel in SCUBA operations This was the first ever SCUBA training for USN divers Following this training Lcdr Fane and Dr Lambertsen demonstrated new UDT capabilities with a successful lock out and re entry from USS Grouper an underway submarine to show the Navy s need for this capability LtCmdr Fane then started the classified Submersible Operations or SUBOPS platoon with men drawn from UDT 2 and 4 under the direction of Lieutenant junior grade Bruce Dunning 41 44 LtCmdr Fane also brought the conventional Aqua lung open circuit SCUBA system into use by the UDTs Open circuit SCUBA is less useful to combat divers as the exhausted air produces a tell tale trail of bubbles However in the early 1950s the UDTs decided they preferred open circuit SCUBA and converted entirely to it The remaining stock of LARUs was supposedly destroyed in a beach party bonfire citation needed Later on the UDT reverted to closed circuit SCUBA using improved rebreathers developed by Dr Lambertsen It was at this time that the UDTs led by LtCmdr Fane established training facilities at Saint Thomas in the Virgin Islands 45 The UDTs also began developing weapons skills and procedures for commando operations on land in coastal regions The UDTs 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 personnel though the back of the aircraft Training this technique was discontinued following the death of a SEAL at NAB Coronado during a training exercise Teams still utilize the Skyhook for equipment extraction and retain the combat capability for personnel if needed Korean War EditDuring the Korean War the UDTs operated on the coasts of North Korea with their efforts initially focused on demolitions and mine disposal Additionally the UDT accompanied South Korean commandos on raids in the North to demolish railroad tunnels and bridges The higher ranking officers of the UDT frowned upon this activity 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 better known missions include the transport of spies into North Korea and the destruction of North Korean fishing nets A more traditional role for the UDT was in support of Operation CHROMITE the amphibious landing at Inchon UDT 1 and UDT 3 divers went in ahead of the landing craft scouting mud flats marking low points in the channel clearing fouled propellers and searching for mines Four UDT personnel acted as wave guides for the Marine landing 46 The UDT assisted in clearing mines in Wonsan harbor under fire from enemy shore batteries Two minesweepers were sunk in these operations A UDT diver dove on the wreck of USS Pledge AM 277 the first U S combat operation using SCUBA gear 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 war began brewing to the south in Vietnam 47 Mercury space capsule recovery practice UDTs exiting SH 3A Sea King HS 6 Gemini 4 recover operations S65 33491NASA Edit Apollo 8 capsule being recovered by UDT 12 1968 Initially the splashdown of U S manned space capsules were unassisted 48 That changed quickly after the second manned flight when Mercury 11 hit the water following reentry the hatch blew and she sank nearly drowning Gus Grissom All Mercury Gemini and Apollo space capsules were subsequently met by UDTs 11 or 12 upon splashdown Before the hatch was opened the UDTs would attach a flotation collar to the capsule and liferaft for the astronauts to safely exit the craft 48 Vietnam War Edit USN 1109964F UDT 12 maintaining UDT Seabee tradition 1965 at DaNang in 1965 The Navy entered the Vietnam War in 1958 when the UDTs delivered a small watercraft far up the Mekong River into Laos In 1961 naval advisers started training South Vietnamese personnel in South Vietnam The men were called the Lien Đoan Người Nhai LDNN or Vietnamese Frogmen which translates as Frogmen Team UDT 11 awarded the Navy Unit Commendation in 1966 UDT 12 awarded the Navy Unit Commendation in 1967 UDT teams carried out hydrographic surveys in South Vietnam s coastal waters and reconnaissance missions of harbors beaches and rivers often under hazardous conditions and enemy fire 49 Later the UDTs supported the Amphibious Ready Groups operating on South Vietnam s rivers UDTs manned riverine patrol craft and went ashore to demolish obstacles and enemy bunkers They operated throughout South Vietnam from the Mekong Delta Sea Float the Parrot s Beak and French canal AO s through I Corps and the Song Cui Dai estuary south of Da Nang Birth of Navy SEALs EditIn the mid 1950s the Navy saw how the UDT s mission had expanded to a broad range of unconventional warfare but also that this clashed with the UDT s traditional focus on swimming and diving operations It was therefore decided to create a new type of unit that would build on the UDT s elite qualities and water borne expertise but would add land combat skills including parachute training and guerrilla counterinsurgency operations 50 These new teams would come to be known as the US Navy SEALs an acronym for Sea Air and Land Initially there was a lag in the unit s creation until President John F Kennedy took office Kennedy recognized the need for unconventional warfare and supported the use of special operations forces against guerrilla activity The Navy moved forward to establish its new special operations force and in January 1962 commissioned SEAL Team ONE in NAB Coronado and SEAL Team TWO at NAB Little Creek UDT 11 amp 12 were still active on the west coast and UDT 21 amp 22 on the east coast The SEALs quickly earned a reputation for valor and stealth in Vietnam where they conducted clandestine raids in perilous territory In May 1983 the remaining UDT teams were reorganized as SEAL teams UDT 11 became SEAL Team Five and UDT 12 became Seal Delivery Vehicle Team One UDT 21 became SEAL Team Four and UDT 22 became Seal Delivery Vehicle Team Two A new team SEAL Team Three was established in October 1983 Since then teams of SEALs have taken on clandestine missions in war torn regions around the world tracking high profile targets such as Panama s Manuel Noriega and Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar and playing integral roles in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan 51 52 Badge EditUDT Badges Officer Underwater Demolition Badge Enlisted Underwater Demolition Badge For those who served in an Underwater Demolition Team the U S Navy authorized the Underwater Demolition operator badge in 1970 However the UDT badge was phased out in 1971 a few months after it appeared as was the silver badge for enlisted UDT SEAL frogmen After that SEAL and UDT operators both officer and enlisted all wore the same gold Trident as well as gold Navy jump wings Unit awards EditThe UDTs have received several unit citations and commendations Members who participated in actions that merited the award are authorized to wear the medal or ribbon associated with the award on their uniform Awards and decorations of the United States Armed Forces have different categories i e Service Campaign Unit and Personal Unit Citations are distinct from the other decorations 53 Naval Combat Demolition Force O Omaha beach Normandy Presidential Unit Citation NormandyNaval Combat Demolition Force U Utah beach Normandy Navy Unit Commendation Normandy 54 UDT 1 Navy Unit Commendation Korea 54 UDT 4 Navy Unit Commendation Guam 54 Navy Unit Commendation Leyte 54 Navy Unit Commendation Okinawa 54 UDT 7 Navy Unit Commendation Marianas 54 Navy Unit Commendation Western Carolinas 54 UDT 11 Presidential Unit Citation Okinawa 55 Presidential Unit Citation Bruni Bay Borneo 55 Presidential Unit Citation Balikpapan Burneo 55 Navy Unit Commendation 55 1966 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation 55 1968 Navy Unit Commendation 55 1969 Presidential Unit Citation 1969 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation 55 1969 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation 55 1969 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation 55 1970 Republic of Vietnam Civil Actions Medal Unit Citation 55 Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm Unit Award 55 Coast Guard Meritorious Unit Commendation 55 UDT 12 Presidential Unit Citation Iwo Jima 55 Presidential Unit Citation Okimawa 55 Navy Unit Commendation 55 1966 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 55 1967 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 55 1967 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 55 1968 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 55 1968 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 55 1969 Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm Unit Award 55 Operation Eagle Pull Operation Frequent Wind Humanitarian Service Medal 55 1979 Boat PeopleUDT 13 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 56 1969 Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm Unit Award 56 1970UDT 14 Navy Unit Commendation Luzon 54 Navy Unit Commendation Iwo Jima 54 Navy Unit Commendation Okinawa 54 UDT 21 Navy Expeditionary Medal 57 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 57 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 57 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 57 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 57 UDT 22 Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Vietnam 58 1969 OPNAV NOTICE 1650 MASTER LIST OF UNIT AWARDS AND CAMPAIGN MEDALS 59 Fiction EditThe Frogmen 1951 starring Dana Andrews and Richard Widmark World War II film based on the Underwater Demolition Teams Contemporary UDT members appear in several sequences citation needed Underwater Warrior 1958 directed by Andrew Marton is based on the memoirs of Lieutenant Commander Francis Douglas Fane Naked Warriors See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Underwater Demolition Team United States Naval Special Warfare Command List of former United States special operations units Underwater demolition The deliberate destruction or neutralization of man made or natural underwater obstacles Seabee Member of the US Naval Construction Forces United States Navy SEALs US Navy special operations force United States special operations forces Special Operations Forces of the US Republic of Korea Navy Special Warfare Flotilla Special warfare unit of Republic of Korea NavyReferences Edit Commemorating The Birthplace of UDT SEAL Teams Waimanalo Hawaii National Navy UDT SEAL Museum Navysealmuseum com 11 November 2013 Retrieved 12 May 2014 SEAL History Before the First Mercury Splashdown National Navy UDT SEAL Museum Navysealmuseum com Retrieved 12 May 2014 a b c d Cunningham Chet 2004 The Frogmen of World War II An Oral History of the U S Navy s Underwater Demolition Teams Pocket Star ISBN 978 0 7434 8216 5 Navy SEAL History Retrieved 25 January 2008 a b c Submarine Blasting 301 Naval Construction Battalion Cruisebook Seabee Museum Archives website Jan 2020 p 60 Port Hueneme CA 1 a b SEAL History Origins of Naval Special Warfare WWII National Navy UDT SEAL Museum Navysealmuseum com Retrieved 12 May 2014 a b c d e f Milligan Benjamin H 2021 By Water Beneath the Walls United States Bantam Books pp 143 186 ISBN 978 0 553 39219 7 Blazich Frank A 12 May 2017 This Week in Seabee History Week of May 14 Seabee Online Navy Facilities Engineering Command Retrieved 18 October 2017 Blazich Frank A 6 June 2014 Opening Omaha Beach Ensign Karnowski and NCDU 45 Seabee Online Navy Facilities Engineering Command Retrieved 18 October 2017 Seal History Origins of Naval Special Warfare WWII Navy Seal Museum Archives Retrieved 18 October 2017 pp 30 31 Dockery amp Brutsman p 34 Dockery Kevin amp Brutsman Bud Navy SEALs A History of the Early Years Berkley Publishing 2001 Naval Combat Demolition Units SpecWarNet net Retrieved 1 March 2018 Erickson Mark St John 3 December 2017 Training the Fighting Seabees of WWII at Camp Peary Daily Press Newport News Virginia Hornfischer James D 2017 The Fleet at Flood Tide America at Total War in the Pacific 1944 1945 New York Bantam Books p 44 a b c d e Report on Naval Combat Demolition Units in Operation Neptune as part of Task Force 122 Submitted by Lt jg H L Blackwell Jr D V G USNR 5 July 1944 World War II Era Beach Obstacles and Hedgehogs from Original NCDU School National Navy UDT SEAL Museum NavySealMuseum com Retrieved 12 May 2014 a b c Liptak Eugene 2014 World War II US Navy Special Warfare Units New York Osprey Publishing p 25 Commander V Amphibious Corps to CinCPac report Underwater Demolition Teams Recommendations Concerning Based on Experience in Flintlock Kwajalein 2 June 1944 declassified from secret a b The Water Is Never Cold James Douglas O Dell 2000 p 132 Brassey s 22841 Quicksilver Drive Dulles Va 20166 ISBN 1 57488 275 9 Meyers Bruce F 2004 Swift Silent and Deadly Marine Amphibious Reconnaissance in the Pacific 1942 1945 Naval Institute Press a b c Hoyt Edwin P 1993 Seals at War New York New York Dell Books ISBN 9780307570062 Blazich Frank A Jr 12 September 2016 This Week in Seabee History Seabee Online Navy Facilities Engineering Command a b c Bush E K 2012 America s First Frogman The Draper Kauffman Story Naval Institute Press p 122 ISBN 978 1 61251 298 3 Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b c Naked Warriors Cdr Francis Douglas Fane USNR Ret St Martin s Press 175 Fifth Ave New York NY 10010 1996 pp 122 131 ISBN 0 312 95985 0 Amphibious Assault Key to the World War II Battle for Peleliu Toni L Carrell PhD Office of Ocean Exploration and Research National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration U S Department of Commerce web site 2 This Week in Seabee History Sept 10 17 for Sept 12 Seabee Magazine online OSS in Action The Pacific and the Far East Series OSS Training in the National Parks and Service Abroad in World War II Catoctin Mountain Park Prince William Forest Park webpage 8 August 2017 National Park Service 1100 Ohio Drive SW Washington DC 20242 3 OPERATIONAL SWIMMER GROUP NAMES IS FROM A LIST WITH THE OSS HONOR ARTICLE PAGE Military Memories webpage 4 a b c d e f The Teams in World War II View of the Rockies Retrieved 18 October 2017 a b c d UDT 13 The Men From Fort Pierce excerpts Marvin Cooper U S Naval Special Warfare Archives web site 5 Underwater Demolition All Hands The Bureau of Naval Personal Information Bulletin October 1945 NAVPERS 0 NUMBER 343 pp 12 15 6 NCDU 216 Photo National Navy UDT SEAL Museum North Hutchinson Island Fort Pierce FL a b c d e f USS BEGOR APD 127 veterans webpage UDT 11 U S Naval Special Warfare Archives web site The Men From Fort Pierce by Marvin Cooper 7 a b c UNDERWATER DEMOLITION TEAM HISTORIES WWII UDT TEAM NINE compiled by Robert Allan King for the UDT SEAL Museum from public records at the Operational Archives of the Naval Historical Center U S Naval Special Warfare Archives web site 8 UNDERWATER DEMOLITION TEAM HISTORIES WWII UDT TEAM EIGHT compiled by Robert Allan King for the UDT SEAL Museum from public records at the Operational Archives of the Naval Historical Center U S Naval Special Warfare Archives web site 9 a b Operations Crossroads DNA 6032F prepared by the Defense Nuclear Agency p 189 90 a b USS BEGOR APD 127 Veterans webpage a b c d e U S Naval Special Warfare Archives After Operation Crossroads Kili Island Mack M Boynton December 21 2013 a b c Butler FK 2004 Closed circuit oxygen diving in the U S Navy Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine 31 1 3 20 PMID 15233156 Archived from the original on 13 June 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Hawkins T 2000 OSS Maritime The Blast 32 1 Vann RD 2004 Lambertsen and O2 beginnings of operational physiology Undersea Hyperb Med 31 1 21 31 PMID 15233157 Archived from the original on 13 June 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Vann RD Spring 2000 The evolution of diving in UDT from WW II through Korea Fire in the Hole CDR Doug Fane Navy Udt leader bigislandforum org Retrieved 6 December 2009 SEAL History Underwater Demolition Teams in the Korean War National Navy UDT SEAL Museum Navysealmuseum com Retrieved 12 May 2014 Navy UDT SEAL Museum History Korea navysealmuseum com Retrieved 25 January 2008 a b UDTs and the Space Flight Programs UDT Navy Seal Museum Archives website Fort Pierce FL 10 SEAL History Vietnam The Men With Green Faces National Navy UDT SEAL Museum Navysealmuseum com Archived from the original on 10 November 2014 Retrieved 12 May 2014 Boynton Mack 2010 A Founding Father of the Navy SEALs PDF Altman Alex 27 April 2009 A Brief History of The Navy SEALs Time Magazine Archived from the original on 18 April 2009 Retrieved 12 May 2013 Mack Boynton 2007 SEAL Story of SEAL Teams The Blast UDT SEAL Association Retrieved 6 December 2009 List of Award Abbreviations Chief of Naval Operations 2000 Navy Pentagon Washington D C 20350 a b c d e f g h i j Naval History and Heritage Command website Part 2 Unit Awards Published Mon Aug 31 14 01 11 EDT 2015 p 22 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v US Navy Awards Chief of Naval Operations 2000 Navy Pentagon Washington D C 20350 a b US Navy Awards Chief of Naval Operations 2000 Navy Pentagon Washington D C 20350 a b c d e US Navy Awards Chief of Naval Operations 2000 Navy Pentagon Washington D C 20350 US Navy Awards Chief of Naval Operations 2000 Navy Pentagon Washington D C 20350 OPNAV NOTICE 1650 MASTER LIST OF UNIT AWARDS AND CAMPAIGN MEDALS DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS 2000 NAVY PENTAGON WASHINGTON DC 20350 2000 18 September 2002Further reading EditBest Herbert The Webfoot Warriors The Story of UDT the U S Navy s Underwater Demolition Team New York John Day Co 1962 OCLC 1315014 Fane Francis Douglas and Don Moore The Naked Warriors The Story of the U S Navy s Frogmen Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press 1995 ISBN 1557502668 OCLC 33007811 O Dell James Douglas The Water Is Never Cold The Origins of the U S Navy s Combat Demolition Units UDTs and SEALs Washington DC Brassey s 2000 ISBN 1574882759 OCLC 44764036 Young Darryl SEALs UDT Frogmen Men Under Pressure New York Ivy Books 1994 ISBN 0804110646 OCLC 31815574 Milligan Benjamin H By Water Beneath The Walls New York Bantam Books 2021 ISBN 978 0 553 39219 7External links EditNavy UDT SEAL Museum NavyFrogMen com U S Naval Special Warfare Archives Pritzker Military Museum amp Library TNT Divers Popular Mechanics November 1945 pp 72 73 one of earliest articles on WW2 UDT units Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Underwater Demolition Team amp oldid 1131218063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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