Friday news release to kill the story too. Disgusting animals.TLDR: they sent Seals to North Korea on some mission and were discovered by civilians fishing for clams in the bay. To cover their tracks they killed a whole boat of civilians and dumped the bodies in the bay.
The free summery completely obstructed that they were just shellfish divers.
A Nighttime Raid
An investigation details a previously undisclosed U.S. operation to intercept the North Korean leader’s communications.
A composite image of military equipment and machines and Kim Jong-un.
Credit...Max-o-matic
Sept. 5, 2025, 6:31 a.m. ET
Today, we bring you inside a secret military operation the United States conducted against North Korea during the first Trump administration.
The story begins with an intelligence problem: It was hard to know what was happening inside North Korea. American spies found it difficult to recruit human sources, and information rarely leaked out. But policymakers in Washington wanted to understand more about Kim Jong-un, the country’s unpredictable leader, ahead of a meeting with Trump. Here is part of the investigation, published today in The Times, into the operation they devised.
Dave Philipps
By Dave Philipps
I’ve covered the military for 15 years. I reported this story alongside veteran military reporter Matthew Cole.
A group of Navy SEALs emerged from the ink black ocean on a winter night in early 2019 and crept to a rocky shore in North Korea. They were on a top secret mission so complex and consequential that everything had to go exactly right.
The objective was to plant an electronic device that would let the United States intercept Kim Jong-un’s communications amid high-level nuclear talks with President Trump.
The mission had the potential to provide the United States a stream of valuable intelligence. But it meant putting American commandos on North Korean soil — a move that, if detected, could not only sink negotiations, but could also lead to a hostage crisis or an escalating conflict with a nuclear-armed foe. It was so risky that it required the president’s direct approval.
For the operation, the military chose SEAL Team 6’s Red Squadron — the same unit that killed Osama Bin Laden. SEALs who were more used to quick raids in places like Afghanistan and Iraq would have to survive for hours in frigid seas, slip past security forces on land and perform a precise technical installation. The SEALs rehearsed for months, aware that every move needed to be perfect.
Yet the team faced a serious limitation: It would be going in almost blind. Typically, Special Operations forces have drones overhead during a mission, streaming high-definition video of the target. Often, they can even listen in on enemy communications. In North Korea, though, any drone would be spotted. So the mission would have to rely on satellites and high-altitude spy planes that could provide only low-definition still images after a lag of several minutes.
So they spent months watching how people came and went in the area. They studied fishing patterns and chose a time when boat traffic would be minimal. The intelligence suggested that if SEALs arrived silently in the right location in the dead of a winter night, they would be unlikely to encounter anyone.
But when they reached what they thought was a deserted shore that night, wearing black wet suits and night-vision goggles, the mission swiftly unraveled. A North Korean boat appeared out of the dark. Flashlights from the bow swept over the water. Fearing that they had been spotted, the SEALs opened fire. Within seconds, everyone on the North Korean boat was dead.
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Read the story to find out what happened next. The details remain classified and are being reported here for the first time. The Trump administration did not inform key members of Congress who oversee intelligence operations, before or after the mission.
The Times is disclosing it to provide the public with a fuller understanding of the risks taken by the first Trump administration during a critical period of diplomacy toward North Korea — and to provide greater transparency about the elite and secretive commando forces in U.S. Special Operations.
They deliberately avoided saying they were civilians in both the headline, and wait until 4/5 of the article before they mention they were just innocent shell divers. Killed them and hid their bodies.
The shore team swam to the boat to make sure that all of the North Koreans were dead. They found no guns or uniforms. Evidence suggested that the crew, which people briefed on the mission said numbered two or three people, had been civilians diving for shellfish. All were dead, including the man in the water.
Officials familiar with the mission said the SEALs pulled the bodies into the water to hide them from the North Korean authorities. One added that the SEALs punctured the boat crew’s lungs with knives to make sure their bodies would sink.
Many of the people involved in the mission were later promoted.
Of course they were.
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