Could battleships return? We explain how missiles, cost, and naval strategy killed the concept and why it isn't likely ...
Military Times on MSN
The Army-Navy game that ‘stopped the war'
The 1944 game delivered a brief respite from the far-flung battles across the globe, drawing attention back to a good, old-fashioned American rivalry.
Not all ships sink to the bottom of the sea due to enemy fire, as some are scuttled instead. It was common during WWII, but ...
Rust does not actually affect the fighting prowess of America’s ships—but it suggests a navy in decline, an image that China has promoted as it builds up its own fleet.
We Are The Mighty on MSN
How the Army-Navy game of 1944 stopped World War II
Army was #1. Navy was #2. The stage was set for one of the greatest games of all time.
One of the most enduring traditions of the Army-Navy Game involves the special patches players on both sides have sewn onto ...
Army Times on MSN
Why Hitler declared war on the United States
Was it an irrational act? Hardly. Pearl Harbor merely gave him the excuse he had long been seeking.
The National Interest on MSN
US and Japan Expand Mine Warfare Readiness in Indo-Pacific
The US Navy drilled on mine warfare with its Japanese counterpart, while Russia and China held joint military drills across ...
Sergeant David Akui walked along Waimanalo Beach on the morning of Dec. 8, 1941, and spotted what he thought was a sea turtle ...
While America honors Pearl Harbor 84 years ago, World War II veterans E. Paul Ball and Luther Hendricks say the haunting ...
America needs to reinvest in building military hardware. The United States spends about 3.4 percent of its gross domestic product on defense, down from nearly 5 percent in 2010 and 9.4 percent in 1967 ...
Adm. William Furlong was a U.S. Navy rear admiral during World War II and served as Chief of Naval Ordnance from 1937 to 1941 ...
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