Latest ""
New editors named at Military Times and service branch publications
Three new editors will lead Military Times and its service branch publications.
By Zamone Perez
Base commanders should be held responsible for enforcing tenants’ rights, lawmaker says
Does the housing tenant bill of rights lack teeth?
By Karen Jowers
Book excerpt: ‘The Hardest Place: The American Military Adrift in Afghanistan’s Pech Valley’
In "The Hardest Place," Wesley Morgan unravels the history troops didn’t know, captures the culture and reality of the war through both American and Afghan eyes, and reports on the snowballing American missteps that made each unit’s job harder than the last.
By Wesley Morgan
Sewage in bathtubs, more mold, stinky closet: Officers sue landlord over Monterey housing
Their daughter’s teacher reported “that there was a stench emanating from the little girl’s clothes."
By Karen Jowers
General becomes 1st Black head of US Air Force Academy
The U.S. Air Force Academy installed a new superintendent who will be the first Black officer to lead the military institution.
Air Force Academy general’s fight against racism resonates
Lt. Gen Jay Silveria, the superintendent of the Air Force Academy, will retire this month after 35 years in uniform.
By Tom Rieder, The Gazette via the AP
Here are the names of the Marine killed and those presumed dead after Corps AAV accident
Two Marines remain hospitalized.
By Andrea Scott
First Black man nominated to lead Air Force Academy
An African American man was nominated for the first time to lead the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, officials said.
What Soleimani’s death might mean for the National Defense Strategy and the next budget
The National Defense Strategy called for redirecting resources from the Middle East to invest in high-end technologies. Rising tensions with Iran threaten to pull the U.S. further into regional conflict.
By Aaron Mehta, Valerie Insinna and David B. Larter
20 years since NATO-wrought freedom, Kosovo remains in limbo
In Kosovo so far, the sword has worked better than the ploughshare.
1,800-year-old Roman penis carvings discovered near Hadrian’s Wall — some things never change
Militarized affinity for phallic scribbling dates back long before the first illustrations were ever fashioned by bored American service members.
By Jon Simkins