Sea Stories: My Life in Special Operations by William H. McRaven
“Sea Stories” is a riveting memoir that captures the epic missions of retired Admiral William H. McRaven. The retired U.S. Navy Admiral takes the reader behind-the-action-packed scenes of his illustrious 40-year career. This enthralling 353-page book includes the following eighteen chapters: 1. The Greatest Generation, 2. Operation Volcano, 3. It’s a Wonderful Life, 4. The Only Easy Day Was Yesterday, 5. The Hand of God? 6. A Gorilla Walks into a Bar, 7. The Ghosts of Tofino, 8. American Pirates, 9. Second Chances, 10. Airborne Froggy, 11. 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, 12. The Ace of Spades, 13. Wanted Dead or Alive, 14. High Seas Hostage, 15. Manhunting, 16. The Next Greatest Generation, 17.Neptune’s Spear, and 18.The Final Salute.
Positives:
1. A well-written, behind-the-scenes memoir.
2. A fascinating memoir, epic missions involving Navy Seals.
3. Action packed missions that are easy to follow. McRaven knows his target audience is the general public so he keeps the technical jargon to a minimum while keeping interesting details. The book is generally broken out into missions and done so chronologically.
4. Describes his family life and how that impacted his life. “But I’m convinced that what made this generation so great was their ability to take the hardships that confronted them and turn them into laughter-filled, self-deprecating, unforgettable, sometimes unbelievable stories of life. My father used to tell me, “Bill, it’s all how you remember it.””
5. The book is quite inspirational. “Knowing I could set a goal, work hard, suffer through pain and adversity, and achieve something worthwhile made me realize that I could accomplish anything I put my mind to.”
6. Describes SEAL training. “For the next thirty-seven years I would compare every tough situation I was in to the rigors of Hell Week. Throughout the rest of my career I was never as cold, or wet, or exhausted as I was in Hell Week, and therefore I knew whatever life threw at me, I could make it.”
7. Great missions covered throughout the book from locating wreckage from 1948 to the mission that led to bin Laden.
8. The capture of Saddam Hussein. “Saddam Hussein had been warned: Get out of Kuwait or we will force you out. The United Nations issued Resolutions 661 and 665 authorizing a naval blockade to stop any ship providing economic support to the Iraqis.”
9. Naval knowledge. “Experience matters, and sometimes all the staff work in the world doesn’t get you better results than what the experienced officer knows intuitively.”
10. Not as technical as I would like but there are some technical descriptions of equipment. “The RHIB was a relatively new boat in the Naval Special Warfare inventory. It was built specifically to carry a SEAL squad of seven men and was crewed by sailors from the Special Boat Squadron. These sailors were all trained as Special Warfare Combatant-Craft Crewmen (SWCCs), and the officer-in-charge was a Navy Surface Warfare Officer, schooled and qualified to pilot a Navy ship.”
11. McRaven is not afraid to describe failures or challenges faced. “Within seconds, the canopy caught air. The two risers, one wrapped around each leg, suddenly and violently pulled apart, taking my legs with them. My pelvis separated instantly as the force of the opening ripped my lower torso. The thousand small muscles that connect the pelvis to the body were torn from their hinges.”
12. His days working at the White House. “I had arrived at the White House just five days earlier assigned to my new position as the Director of Strategy and Military Affairs in the Office of Combatting Terrorism. My boss, retired four-star General Wayne Downing, had persuaded Admiral Olson that my services would be better utilized in the White House, helping orchestrate the war on terrorism, than on the Navy staff in the Pentagon.”
13. Interesting findings or lack thereof. “There were also no weapons of mass destruction, and no matter how many times the team reengaged Saddam on the issue, the answer was always the same. Iraq didn’t have nuclear WMD. It was not the answer we were hoping for.”
14. A look at suicide bombings and the quest to track down Abu Ghadiya. “The most difficult part of the plan would be getting all the approvals quickly enough to be able to react when Ghadiya was on target. But in reality, we needed only one yes vote, and that was the President of the United States, George W. Bush.”
15. Somali pirates and the quest to rescue Captain Richard Phillips. “This year alone, Somali pirates had attacked more than two hundred ships, with 263 crewmen being taken hostage. Most of the ships and their crew were taken to an anchorage point off the Somali coast where they waited, sometimes for years, before the shipping company negotiated their release.”
16. The heart of a soldier. “I look back on the hundreds of men and women I visited in the hospitals. Every single one of them—every single one of them—asked me the same basic question: When can I return to my unit? When can I be back with my fellow soldiers? When can I get back in the fight? No matter how battered their bodies, all they could think about were their friends, their colleagues, their comrades, still in harm’s way. Never once—never once—did I hear a soldier complain about their lot in life.”
17. Political philosophy worth repeating. “If a nation is to survive and thrive it must pass on the ideals that made it great and imbue in its citizens an indomitable spirit, a will to continue on regardless of how difficult the path, how long the journey, or how uncertain the outcome. People must have a true belief that tomorrow will be a better day—if only they fight for it and never give up.”
18. The quest to track down Osama bin Laden. “Three months earlier, the Deputy Director of the CIA, Michael Morell had briefed me that the CIA had a lead on the location of Osama (a.k.a. Usama) bin Laden (UBL). Through a series of courier follows, surveillance, and technical collection, the Agency identified a large walled-in compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.”
19. Special forces. “I concluded that special operations forces were able to achieve “relative superiority” over an enemy by developing a “simple plan, carefully concealed, repeatedly rehearsed, and executed with surprise, speed, and purpose.”
20. Photo inserts provided.
Negatives:
1. Lacked supplementary materials that could have made this book a true 5-star effort. As an example, McRaven could have provided a glossary of acronyms, or better yet an appendix describing weapons used by Navy Seals.
2. There are some references to “ghosts” and or “spiritual” experiences that I could do without.
3. I understand why McRaven decided to make the book accessible for the masses. Understood, but some of us technical junkies wanted more information on the weapons used.
In summary, this is a book that reads like a thriller but even better because it’s based on real events. Admiral McRaven provides readers with a taste of what our military special forces are all about by describing his first-hand remarkable experiences involving epic missions. A lot of fun to read and I highly recommend it!
Further recommendations: “Make Your Bed” and “Spec Ops” by the same author, “My Share of the Task” by Stanley McChrystal, “Saving Bravo: The Greatest Rescue Mission in Navy History” by Stephan Talty, “Transformed” by Thomas Nelson, “Relentless Strike” and “Not a Good Day to Die” by Sean Naylor, “Delta Force” by Charlie A. Beckwith, “Chosen Soldier” by Dick Couch, and “War” by Sebastian Junger.