
by Dave Philipps and Matthew Cole
September 05, 2025
from
NYTimes Website
Article also HERE
Dave Philipps is a
national correspondent for The New York Times,
and
Matthew Cole is a freelance journalist.
Both have covered
the military for
more than 15 years.
Julian E. Barnes,
Adam Entous and Eric Schmitt contributed reporting. |

President Trump
and the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un,
had an
erratic relationship.
They met on Sentosa Island in Singapore in
2018.
Credit: Doug Mills/The New York Times
The 2019 operation,
greenlit by President Trump,
sought a strategic
edge.
It left unarmed North Koreans dead.
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 the communications of North Korea's
reclusive leader, Kim Jong-un, amid high-level nuclear talks with
President
Trump.
The mission had the potential to provide the
United States with a stream of valuable intelligence.
But it meant
putting American commandos on North Korean soil - a move that, if
detected, not only could sink negotiations but also could 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.
The SEALs rehearsed for
months, aware that every move needed to be perfect.
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.
The SEALs retreated into the sea without planting
the listening device.
The 2019 operation has never been publicly
acknowledged, or even hinted at, by the United States or North
Korea.
The details remain classified and are being reported here for
the first time...
The (first)
Trump administration did not notify key members
of Congress who oversee intelligence operations, before or after the
mission. The lack of notification may have violated the law.
The White House declined to comment...
This account is based on interviews with two dozen people, including
civilian government officials, members of the first Trump
administration and current and former military personnel with
knowledge of the mission.
All of them spoke on the condition of
anonymity because of the mission's classified status.
Several of those people said they were discussing details about the
mission because they were concerned that Special Operations failures
are often hidden by government secrecy.
If the public and
policymakers become aware only of high-profile successes, such as
the raid that killed bin Laden in Pakistan, they may underestimate
the extreme risks that American forces undertake.
The military operation on North Korean soil, close to American
military bases in South Korea and the Pacific region, also risked
setting off a broader conflict with a hostile, nuclear-armed and
highly militarized adversary.
The New York Times proceeds cautiously when
reporting on classified military operations.
The Times has withheld
some sensitive information on the North Korea mission that could
affect future Special Operations and intelligence-gathering
missions.
It is unclear how much North Korea was able to discover about the
mission.
But the SEAL operation is one chapter in a decades-long
effort by U.S. administrations to engage North Korea and constrain
its nuclear weapons programs.
Almost nothing the United States has
tried - neither promises of closer relations nor the pressure of
sanctions - has worked...
In 2019, Mr. Trump was making a personalized
overture to Mr. Kim, in search of a breakthrough that had eluded
prior presidents.
But those talks collapsed, and North Korea's
nuclear program accelerated. The U.S. government estimates that
North Korea now has roughly 50 nuclear weapons and missiles that can
reach the West Coast.
Mr. Kim has
pledged to keep expanding his
nuclear program "exponentially" to deter what he calls "U.S.
provocation"...
Blind Spots
The SEAL mission was intended to fix a strategic blind spot.
For
years, U.S. intelligence agencies had found it nearly impossible to
recruit human sources and tap communications in North Korea's
insular authoritarian state.
Gaining insight into Mr. Kim's thinking became a
high priority when Mr. Trump first took office.
The North Korean
leader seemed increasingly unpredictable and dangerous, and his
relationship with Mr. Trump had lurched erratically between letters
of friendship and public threats of nuclear war.
In 2018, relations seemed to be moving toward
peace.
North Korea
suspended nuclear and missile
tests, and the two countries opened negotiations, but the United
States still had little insight into Mr. Kim's intentions.
Amid the uncertainty, U.S. intelligence agencies
revealed to the White House that they had a fix for the intelligence
problem: a newly developed electronic device that could intercept
Mr. Kim's communications.
The catch was that someone had to sneak in and plant it.

Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim
met at the Metropole Hotel
in Hanoi, Vietnam,
in February 2019.
Credit: Doug Mills/The New York Times
The job was given to
SEAL Team 6 in 2018, military officials said.
Even for Team 6, the mission would be extraordinarily difficult.
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, perform a precise technical installation
and then get out undetected.
Getting out undetected was vital.
In Mr. Trump's
first term, top leaders in the Pentagon believed that even a small
military action against North Korea could provoke
catastrophic retaliation from an
adversary with roughly 8,000 artillery pieces and rocket launchers
aimed at the approximately 28,000 American troops in South Korea,
and nuclear-capable missiles that could reach the United States.
But the SEALs believed they could pull off the
mission because they had done something like it before.
In 2005, SEALs used a mini-sub to go ashore in North Korea and leave
unnoticed, according to people familiar with the mission. The 2005
operation, carried out during the presidency of
George W. Bush, has
never before been reported publicly.
The SEALs were proposing to do it again.
In the fall of 2018, while
high-level talks with North Korea were underway, Joint Special
Operations Command, which oversees Team 6, received approval from
Mr. Trump to start preparing, military officials said. It is unclear
whether Mr. Trump's intent was to gain an immediate advantage during
negotiations or if the focus was broader.
Joint Special Operations Command declined to comment.
The plan called for the Navy to sneak a nuclear-powered submarine,
nearly two football fields long, into the waters off North Korea and
then deploy a small team of SEALs in two mini-subs, each about the
size of a killer whale, that would motor silently to the shore.
The mini-subs were wet subs, which meant the SEALs would ride
immersed in 40-degree ocean water for about two hours to reach the
shore, using scuba gear and heated suits to survive.

A U.S. Ohio-class nuclear-powered guided missile submarine
takes
part in exercises near Okinawa, Japan, in 2021.
A similar submarine
transported a Navy SEAL team
to waters off North Korea in 2019.
Credit: U.S. Marine Corps, via Department of Defense
Near the beach, the mini-subs would release a group of about eight
SEALs who would swim to the target, install the device and then slip
back into the sea.
But 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, which SEALs
on the ground and senior leaders in far-off command centers can use
to direct the strike in real time.
Often, they can even listen in on
enemy communications.
But in North Korea, any drone would be spotted.
The mission would
have to rely on satellites in orbit and high-altitude spy planes in
international airspace miles away that could provide only relatively
low-definition still images, officials said.
Those images would arrive not in real time, but after a delay of
several minutes at best. Even then, they could not be relayed to the
mini-subs because a single encrypted transmission might give the
mission away.
Everything had to be done under a near blackout of
communications.
If anything awaited the SEALs on shore, they might not know until it
was too late.
The Operation Unravels
SEAL Team 6 practiced for months in U.S. waters and continued
preparations into the first weeks of 2019.
That February, Mr. Trump
announced that he would meet Mr. Kim for a nuclear summit in Vietnam
at the end of the month.
For the mission, SEAL Team 6 partnered with the Navy's premier
underwater team, SEAL Delivery Vehicle Team 1, which had been doing
mini-sub espionage for years.
The SEALs boarded the nuclear-powered
submarine and headed for North Korea. When the submarine was in the
open ocean, and about to enter a communications blackout, Mr. Trump
gave the final go-ahead.
It is unclear what factors Mr. Trump weighed when approving the SEAL
mission.
Two of his top national security officials at that time
- his national security adviser, John Bolton, and the acting defense
secretary, Patrick M. Shanahan - declined to comment for this
article.
The submarine neared the North Korean coast and launched two
mini-subs, which motored to a spot about 100 yards from shore, in
clear shallow water.
Mission planners had tried to compensate for having no live overhead
video by spending months watching how people came and went in the
area. They studied fishing patterns and chose a time when boat
traffic would be scant.
The intelligence suggested that if SEALs
arrived silently in the right location in the dead of night in
winter, they would be unlikely to encounter anyone.

The coast of North Korea, pictured in 2018,
is frequented by small
fishing boats.
Credit: Ed Jones/Agence France-Presse
- Getty Images
The night was still and the sea was calm.
As the mini-subs glided
toward the target, their sensors suggested that the intelligence was
correct.
The shore appeared to be empty.
The mini-subs reached the spot where they were supposed to park on
the sea floor.
There, the team made what may have been the first of
three small mistakes that seemed inconsequential at the time but may
have doomed the mission.
In the darkness, the first mini-sub settled on the sea floor as
planned, but the second overshot the mark and had to do a U-turn,
officials said.
The plan called for the mini-subs to park facing the same way, but
after the second sub doubled back, they were pointing in opposite
directions.
Time was limited, so the group decided to release the
shore team and correct the parking issue later.
Sliding doors on the subs opened, and the SEALs
- all gripping
untraceable weapons loaded with untraceable ammunition - swam
silently underwater to shore with the listening device.
Every few yards, the SEALs peeked above the black water to scan
their surroundings. Everything seemed clear.
That might have been a second mistake.
Bobbing in the darkness was a
small boat. On board was a crew of North Koreans who were easy to
miss because the sensors in the SEALs' night-vision goggles were
designed in part to detect heat, and the wet suits the Koreans wore
were chilled by the cold seawater.
The SEALs reached shore thinking they were alone, and started to
remove their diving gear. The target was only a few hundred yards
away.
Back at the mini-subs, the pilots repositioned the sub that was
facing the wrong way.
With the sliding cockpit doors open for
visibility and communication, a pilot revved the electric motor and
brought the sub around.
That was probably a third mistake.
Some SEALs speculated afterward
in briefings that the motor's wake might have caught the attention
of the North Korean boat.
And if the boat crew heard a splash and
turned to look, they might have seen light from the subs' open
cockpits glowing in the dark water.
The boat started moving toward the mini-subs.
The North Koreans were
shining flashlights and talking as if they had noticed something.
Some of the mini-sub pilots told officials in debriefings afterward
that from their vantage point, looking up through the clear water,
the boat still seemed to be a safe distance away and they had
doubted that the mini-subs had been spotted.
But the SEALs at the
shore saw it differently.
In the dark, featureless sea, the boat to
them seemed to be practically on top of the mini-subs.

A Navy mini-sub, known as a SEAL Delivery Vehicle,
during a training
exercise in 2007.
Similar vehicles were used in the 2019 mission.
Credit: U.S. Navy, via Department of Defense
With communications blacked out, there was no way for the shore team
to confer with the mini-subs.
Lights from the boat swept over the
water.
The SEALs didn't know if they were seeing a security patrol
on the hunt for them or a simple fishing crew oblivious to the
high-stakes mission unfolding around them.
A man from the North Korean boat splashed into the sea.
If the shore team got into trouble, the nuclear-powered sub had a
group of SEAL reinforcements standing by with inflatable speedboats.
Farther offshore, stealth rotary aircraft were positioned on U.S.
Navy ships with even more Special Operations troops, ready to sweep
in if needed.
The SEALs faced a critical decision, but there was no way to discuss
the next move.
The mission commander was miles away on the big
submarine. With no drones and a communications blackout, many of the
technological advantages that the SEALs normally relied on had been
stripped away, leaving a handful of men in wet neoprene, unsure of
what to do.
As the shore team watched the North Korean in the water, the senior
enlisted SEAL at the shore chose a course of action. He wordlessly
centered his rifle and fired.
The other SEALs instinctively did the
same.
Compromise and Escape
If the SEALs were unsure whether the mission had been compromised
before they fired, they had no doubt afterward.
The plan required
the SEALs to abort immediately if they encountered anyone. North
Korean security forces could be coming. There was no time to plant
the device.
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.
The SEALs swam back to the mini-subs and sent a distress signal.
Believing the SEALs were in imminent danger of capture, the big
nuclear submarine maneuvered into shallow water close to the shore,
taking a significant risk to pick them up.
It then sped toward the
open ocean.
All the U.S. military personnel escaped unharmed.
Immediately afterward, U.S. spy satellites detected a surge of North
Korean military activity in the area, U.S. officials said.
North
Korea did not make any public statements about the deaths, and U.S.
officials said it was unclear whether the North Koreans ever pieced
together what had happened and who was responsible.
The nuclear summit in Vietnam went ahead as planned at the end of
February 2019, but the talks quickly ended with no deal.
By May, North Korea had resumed missile tests.
Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim
met once more that June in the
Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea. It made for
dramatic television, with Mr. Trump even stepping across into North
Korea. But the brief meeting yielded little more than a handshake.
In the months that followed, North Korea fired more missiles than in
any previous year, including some capable of reaching the United
States.
Since then, the United States estimates, North Korea has
amassed 50 nuclear warheads and material to produce about
40 more.
Uneven Track Record
The aborted SEAL mission prompted a series of military reviews
during Mr. Trump's first term...
They found that the killing of
civilians was justified under the rules of engagement, and that the
mission was undone by a collision of unfortunate occurrences that
could not have been foreseen or avoided. The findings were
classified.
The Trump administration never told leaders of key committees in
Congress that oversee military and intelligence activities about the
operation or the findings, government officials said.
In doing so,
the Trump administration may have violated federal law, said Matthew
Waxman, a law professor at Columbia University who served in
national security positions under former President George W. Bush.
Mr. Waxman said the law has gray areas that give presidents some
leeway on what they tell Congress.
But on more consequential
missions, the burden leans more toward notification.
"The point is to ensure that Congress isn't kept in the dark when
major stuff is going on," Mr. Waxman said.
"This is exactly the kind of thing that would
normally be briefed to the committees and something the
committees would expect to be told about."
Many of the people involved in the mission were later promoted.
But the episode worried some experienced military officials with
knowledge of the mission, because the SEALs have an uneven track
record that for decades has largely been concealed by secrecy.
Elite Special Operations units are regularly
assigned some of the most difficult and dangerous tasks.
Over the years, the SEALs have had a number of
major successes, including,
But among some in the military who have worked
with them, the SEALs have a reputation for devising overly bold and
complex missions that go badly.
Team 6's debut mission, which was
part of the U.S.
invasion of Grenada in 1983, is a case in point.
The plan was to parachute into the sea, race to the coast in
speedboats and plant beacons to guide assault forces to the island's
airport.
But the SEALs' plane took off late; they jumped
at night and landed in stormy conditions, weighed down by heavy
gear. Four SEALs
drowned, and the rest swamped their
speedboats.
The airfield was later seized by Army Rangers who
parachuted directly onto the airfield.

U.S. troops monitoring the Point Salines airfield
after the invasion
of Grenada in 1983.
SEAL Team 6's debut mission,
directed at the
island's main airport, went badly awry.
Credit: Associated Press
Since then, SEALs have mounted other complex and
daring missions that unraveled in,
During a rescue mission in Afghanistan in 2010,
Team 6 SEALs accidentally
killed a hostage they were trying to rescue with a grenade and
then misled superiors about how she had died.
In part because of this track record, President
Barack Obama curtailed Special Operations missions late in his
second term and increased oversight, reserving complex commando
raids for extraordinary situations like hostage rescues.
The first Trump administration reversed many of those restrictions
and cut the amount of high-level deliberation for sensitive
missions.
A few days after taking office in 2017, Mr. Trump
skipped over much of the established deliberative process to greenlight a Team 6
raid on a village in Yemen.
That
mission left 30 villagers and a SEAL dead and destroyed a
$75 million stealth aircraft.
When President
Joseph R. Biden Jr. succeeded Mr.
Trump, the gravity of the North Korea mission attracted renewed
scrutiny. Mr. Biden's defense secretary, Lloyd J. Austin III,
ordered an independent investigation, conducted by the lieutenant
general in charge of the Army inspector general's office.
In 2021, the Biden administration briefed key members of Congress on
the findings, a former government official said.
Those findings remain classified...
|