Scouts and Raiders: The Navy's First Special Warfare Commandos
By (Author) John B. Dwyer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
17th March 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Irregular or guerrilla forces and warfare
359.9
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
454g
The history of the Scouts and Raiders of World War II is the story of the precursors of today's elite SEAL teams. As the Navy's first special warfare commandos these highly trained and skilled officer/enlisted boat crews conducted pre-assault reconnaissances of landing beaches, hydrographic reconnaissances, marked assault beaches, and guided in assault waves from 36-foot Scout boats, rubber boats, and kayaks at North Africa, Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, Southern France, and Normandy, earning numerous decorations for heroism, including eight Navy Crosses. In the Mediterranean, Scouts and Raiders trained elite units such as Rangers and the First Special Service Force, and were assigned to Special Operations Task Group 80.4 and the Adriatic Special Operations Group, working with Allied units supporting Tito's partisans. In the Pacific, Scouts and Raiders served as Scout Intelligence Officers, Amphibious Scouts, Beachmasters, and with Underwater Demolition Teams with the Fifth and Seventh Amphibious Forces from Kwajalein to Okinawa and in the Philippines campaign. They served in Admiral Milton Miles' US Naval Group in China, training Nationalist Chinese guerrillas, participating in raids and ambushes and conducting behind-the-lines overland reconnaissances, disguised as coolies to escape detection by Japanese forces. Highly trained, skilled and brave, the Scouts and Raiders were the Navy's first special warfare commandos. This book should be useful to anyone interested in military and naval history, amphibious operations and special warfare. It tells, for the first time, the story of the Scouts and Raiders, a unique World War II unit.
For those interested in small units and their activities during the war, this book fills a useful niche. The firm focus on individuals and careful attention to personal histories and anecdotes make this book interesting to read.-The Northern Mariner
Rating: Excellent This account of thearte of opperations in the North Africa, Elba, the Adriatic, France, Okinawa and SACO(sino-American Cooperative Orangation) in China, Pacific, China, Korea at Normandy and the Mederaian during WWII is the best account to provide essential historical information.- The Bookseller's Network
Scouts and Raiders' of World War II. . . . Their development, training and actions in both theaters of war are recounted in detail in this well-researched history.-Proceedings
"For those interested in small units and their activities during the war, this book fills a useful niche. The firm focus on individuals and careful attention to personal histories and anecdotes make this book interesting to read."-The Northern Mariner
"Scouts and Raiders' of World War II. . . . Their development, training and actions in both theaters of war are recounted in detail in this well-researched history."-Proceedings
"Rating: Excellent This account of thearte of opperations in the North Africa, Elba, the Adriatic, France, Okinawa and SACO(sino-American Cooperative Orangation) in China, Pacific, China, Korea at Normandy and the Mederaian during WWII is the best account to provide essential historical information."- The Bookseller's Network
JOHN B. DWYER is a professional naval/military writer and historian. He is the author of Seaborne Deception: The History of U.S. Navy Beach Jumpers (Praeger, 1992). He also has published numerous articles on the military, and especially on naval topics, in journals devoted to military operations and history.