Silence to violence: What the bridge scene in ‘1917′ says about warA re-watch of "1917" reveals much about duty and sacrifice, but the bridge scene is its violent awakening. It tells us that war doesn’t wait for clarity.By Clay Beyersdorfer2 days ago
OpinionTo bootstrap US maritime industrial base, link allies and innovatorsAs officials consider the wholesale resuscitation of U.S. shipbuilding, there is a nearer-term lever worth pulling, the author of this op-ed argues.By Joshua Tallis3 days ago
Soldier becomes first woman to compete in Best Ranger CompetitionFirst Lt. Gabrielle White, and her teammate, Capt. Seth Deltenre, finished the grueling three-day event over the weekend and came in 14th overall.By Lolita C. Baldor, The Associated Press11 days ago
The accidental Word War II victory of a little PT boat that couldUnder the command of Lt. Isadore Kovar, PT-137 missed a Japanese destroyer — and crippled a cruiser instead.By Jon Guttman14 days ago
‘Warfare’ directors talk filmmaking process, capturing combat realismDirectors Ray Mendoza and Alex Garland discuss everything that went into creating one of the most realistic depictions of combat ever made.By J.D. Simkins2 weeks ago
Her father owned Himmler’s personal copy of ‘Mein Kampf’ — but how?John Fletcher Sisson served in the 4th Infantry Division during WWII and returned home with a unique "trophy" — Heinrich Himmler's "Mein Kampf."By Claire Barrett2 weeks ago