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The US Army has been ordered by a federal judge to release records related to former President Donald Trump’s controversial August visit to Arlington National Cemetery by Friday at the latest.
A Texas-based US Army soldier has been arrested and charged with selling confidential phone records, including material allegedly stolen from President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala ...
Unethical human experimentation in the United States; United States Armed Forces nude photo scandal; United States Army beef scandal; United States military and prostitution in South Korea; United States Navy dog handler hazing scandal; United States raid on the Iranian Liaison Office in Erbil
800-290-4726 more ways to reach us. Sign in ... Monday with an official at Arlington National Cemetery who tried to stop them from filming in an area where recent U.S. military ... In Other News.
Operation Speedy Express was a controversial military operation aimed at pacifying large parts of the Mekong delta from December 1968 to May 1969. The U.S. Army claimed 10,899 PAVN/VC were killed in the operation, while the US Army Inspector General estimated that there were 5,000 to 7,000 civilian deaths from the operation.
U.S. Army Special Operations Command map, [15] [10] depicting the US military plans during the Jade Helm 15 exercise The conspiracy theories seem to emanate from the map shown here from the U.S. Army Special Operations Command which divides the region into four colors, with two "hostile" states, two "permissive" states, two states leaning one way or the other, and California divided. [16]
WASHINGTON (AP) — A controversial military policy that allows service members to be reimbursed for travel if they or a family member have to go out of state for reproductive health care — including abortions — was used just 12 times from June to December last year, the Pentagon said Tuesday.
In November 2009, having learned of the cremated individual's reburial, United States Secretary of the Army John M. McHugh ordered an investigation by the Inspector General of the Army. [1] An article on Salon.com on July 16, 2009, began a year-long series of articles about problems at Arlington, [ 7 ] which may have also prompted McHugh's actions.