United States Navy Norris enlisted in the
United States Navy when his student deferment from the draft was not extended. However, the instructors decided to allow Norris to try to finish the training, and he graduated from BUD/S class 45 in July 1969 at Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek. Norris completed his first tour of duty in
South Vietnam with Fifth Platoon, SEAL Team TWO from February to August 1970 earning
Bronze Star Medal with
combat "V" device.
Ground rescue operation went behind enemy lines disguised as fishermen in a sampan to rescue Lieutenant Colonel Iceal Hambleton. Norris was awarded the
Medal of Honor and Nguyen was recognized with the
Navy Cross for their actions. In April 1972, Norris was one of few remaining SEALs in Vietnam serving with
MACVSOG Danang Naval Advisory Detachment. When Lieutenant Colonel
Iceal Hambleton,
USAF, a senior planning officer flying as an
EB-66 Destroyer electronic warfare officer, was shot down behind enemy lines, aerial
combat search and rescue operations failed, leading to the loss of five additional aircraft and the death of 11 or more airmen, two captured, and three more down and needing rescue. Norris was tasked with mounting a ground operation to recover Hambleton, Lieutenant Mark Clark, and Lieutenant Bruce Walker from behind enemy lines. Assisted by Vietnamese Sea Commando forces, he and
Republic of Vietnam Navy Petty Officer
Nguyen Van Kiet went more than behind enemy lines and successfully
rescued two of the downed American aviators. Walker was discovered and killed by the North Vietnamese Army. Though Norris at first rejected the honor, he was recognized with the
Medal of Honor in 1975.
Intelligence gathering mission Six months later, on October 31, 1972, Norris and fellow Navy SEAL
Michael E. Thornton accompanied three
South Vietnamese special forces soldiers on an intelligence gathering operation south of the demilitarized zone. They intended to reconnoiter the area around the
Cửa Việt Base near the coast of
Quảng Trị Province, just south of the
Demilitarized Zone. Approaching by sea, the group was transported by
junk until sunset, then paddled a rubber boat to within a mile of shore and swam the remaining distance. Moving inland past numerous North Vietnamese encampments, the group reconnoitered through the night. When morning dawned, the five-man group realized that they had landed to the north and were actually in North Vietnam. They soon encountered a two-man North Vietnamese patrol, which the South Vietnamese attempted to capture. Instead, enemy troops were alerted to their position. For the next four hours, the five men held off an enemy force estimated at 200–300 strong. Norris called in naval firepower on the enemy's positions, helping to keep them alive. The North Vietnamese regrouped and surrounded the troops, and the SEALs and South Vietnamese decided to withdraw. Norris protected their rear while the others moved towards the water. He was shot in the head and severely wounded. One of the South Vietnamese who saw Norris' wound assumed he was dead. Thornton, upon hearing the news, ran through heavy fire to recover the body of his fallen comrade, only to discover that Norris was still just barely alive. He killed several North Vietnamese as they surmounted the dunes around his position and then carried the unconscious Norris into the water. Thornton also carried one of the South Vietnamese soldiers who had been wounded and was unable to swim into the ocean. Thornton swam and supported the two injured men for more than two hours before they were picked up by the same junk that had dropped them off the night before. Thornton was recognized with the Medal of Honor for his actions of April 1972 by President
Richard Nixon during a ceremony at the
White House on October 15, 1973. He snuck Norris out of the hospital in the middle of the night so Norris could attend the ceremony. Norris was later awarded the Medal of Honor by President
Gerald R. Ford in a White House ceremony on March 6, 1976. Norris thus became the first Medal of Honor recipient recognized for their life having been saved by another Medal of Honor recipient. Norris lost an eye and part of his skull. He spent three years recovering from his injuries in the hospital and over a six-year period underwent many major surgeries, and his first surgery lasted 19 hours. As a result of the head injury, he was medically retired from the Navy in May 1975. ==FBI==