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WHO ARE THE SEABEES,
AND ARE THEY SPECIAL FORCES?
Special Forces have definitions that vary between the different branches of our country's
military, and also change over time as external challenges change. The U.S. Air Force has their Special Tactics and Pararescue
Teams, the Navy has the UDTs and SEALs, the Army has the Green Berets and Delta Force, and the Marines have Marine Recon,
just to name a few groups that undoubtedly come under the umbrella of Special Forces or Special Warfare. These different teams
have certain traits and skills in common: Each is a force-multiplier for major warfighting units. That is, they provide strong
leverage well out of proportion to their size and logistics requirements, to help make regular formations on the battlefield
also be effective out of proportion to their actual size, equipment, and adequacy of re-supply. Every Special Forces unit
member is trained not only in combat skills, but also in improvisation, unconventional thinking, and initiative outside the
box, to a very intensive degree. Each Special Forces unit also can play an active role in humanitarian missions, helping win
hearts and minds in foreign lands during any armed conflict -- or helping save lives in natural disasters ranging from famines
to earthquakes, too. Special Forces often work on turf or in surf controlled or dominated by an enemy, deploying in both rural
and urban settings. (This might be the closest thing to going behind enemy lines that well see during an era of increasing
Fourth Generation Warfare.) Special Forces seldom take immediate part in front-line set-piece offensive operations.
Now,
what do Seabees do? Seabees are trained for combat, but usually dont serve in front-line offensive ops; yet their weapons
training and qualification standards are very rigorous -- they are definitely not support or rear-area personnel. Their specialty
is erecting good things and neutralizing bad things, whether this be building roads leading inland from an amphibious assault
beach or through a swamp, or sealing up caves containing enemy snipers, or laying water pipelines to serve parched areas,
or building and improving hospitals and schools. The level of ingenuity in solving open-ended problems while under fire, demonstrated
by each generation of Seabees, is (or certainly should be) something of legend. Seabees routinely operate bulldozers or jackhammers
while enemy bullets and shrapnel fly on their often-hellish worksites around the globe. They do so with the same courage and
determination that Soldiers or Marines operate main battle tanks, or machine guns. The only difference is that their primary
implements are unconventional as weapons go: Theyre construction tools.
The overlap between the work of Seabees and
that of recognized Special Forces is probably starting to emerge as you read this. But, you may say, its not the same. True
Special Forces participate in classified ops, or work in extreme climatic conditions. A couple of examples might then interest
you:
1. In the early 1960s, 500 Seabees of Navy Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 4, then home ported in Davisville,
gave direct support to some of the most classified activities ever maintained by America. They voyaged to Holy Loch, Scotland,
to build from disassembled sections an entire floating dry dock, to service our Submarine Fleet conducting strategic deterrent
patrols against the Soviet Union, playing a deadly game of Cold War Blind Man's Bluff. This assembly task continued virtually 24/7/365 until it was finished in
record time -- which even so, took about a year.
2. For decades Seabees participated in Operation Deep Freeze in Antarctica,
performing most heavy construction done for the U.S. on that continent -- in support of scientific research and other activities,
some of them possibly classified. The Seabees enjoyed summers where the temperature was often 30 below zero Fahrenheit, and
sometimes wintered over where the temperature with wind chill fell below minus 100 -- and every single aspect of daily activity
risked life and limb.
Before we wrap up by exploring the common lineage of todays Seabees and real Navy Special Warfare
units, here are two samples of recent Seabees' humanitarian projects.
1. Seabees assigned to the 1st Marine Expeditionary
Forces Engineer Group participated in a grim but vital effort: the exhumation of thousands of bodies from the now-infamous
mass graves of the brutal dictatorship of Saddam Hussein -- so that these victims of oppression could stand a chance to be
identified, and the remains given proper burial by their loved ones in Iraq. Is it possible for anyone who has never done
such work to imagine the commitment involved, and the psychological toll, on those Seabees who performed this duty? The mental
endurance required to keep at it constantly must have rivaled the emotional toughness demanded of Americas most hardened Special
Forces troops.
2. On a more upbeat note, Seabees detailed to Bahrain (an island nation in the Persian Gulf next to
Saudi Arabia) as part of NMCB-4, applied their construction skills on behalf of mans best friend: Using only donated and excess
materials, they installed a much-needed air-conditioning system in a local humane society, where homeless dogs were suffering
from summertime heat of over 110 degrees. The Seabees did this while they had a few extra days before returning to their own
homes in the U.S. (NMCB-4 is now home ported in Port Heuneme, California. This is the same outfit that 40+
years ago built that submarine dry dock in Scotland.
The first Seabees were created of necessity, in World War II,
to help in the Pacific island-hopping campaign. As a result they cut their teeth in combat working in and around seawater,
dealing with beach obstacles and other hydrographic hazards -- not to mention incoming Japanese fire. The Navy soon realized
the need for an even more specialized group, which became the Underwater Demolition Teams, the UDTs. Early in Vietnam, JFK ordered a new Special Forces group be created. This offshoot of the UDTs was the U.S. Navy
SEALs. The Seabees are thus an ancestor of the Special Warfare community of today. Its a blood relationship in every sense
of the word.
So, are Seabees really Special Forces? Maybe not in the formal context of the phrase, but theyre certainly
very special forces no matter how you look at them.

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