Dark Footage Official on MSN
Designed to crack Japan: The US fires WW2's largest, most brutal caliber gun
As Allied forces relentlessly pushed German and Japanese armies back during World War II, the United States War Department faced a critical, impossible problem: how to destroy the famously resilient, ...
Satellite imagery reviewed by Newsweek this week showed Chinese-led work to revive a World War II-era runway was nearing completion in the remote South Pacific atoll of Wolaei, just a few hundred ...
Army 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, ...
Could battleships return? We explain how missiles, cost, and naval strategy killed the concept and why it isn't likely ...
Army Times on MSN
Why Hitler declared war on the United States
Adolf Hitler speaks at the Reichstag in Berlin, Germany, 1939. (Central Press/Hulton Archive/) When news of the Japanese ...
WW2OnTV Official on MSN
American codebreakers uncover Japan's secret plan to destroy the US Navy at Midway
In 1942, US intelligence achieved the impossible by cracking Japan's naval code, revealing a devastating plot to annihilate ...
American and Japanese officials gathered in Pearl Harbor on Monday as commemorations of the anniversary of the Dec. 7, 1941, ...
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 ...
Pearl Harbor’s 84th Anniversary commemoration, themed “Building Pathways to Peace," reflects on the 1941 attack that launched ...
The National Interest on MSN
The Legendary USS Intrepid Now Has a Digital Clone
A team of surveyors scanned every inch of the USS Intrepid to create a 15-terabyte digital model—aided by its closure to the ...
Military Times on MSN
You can thank Theodore Roosevelt for the Army-Navy game
Canceled by President Grover Cleveland. Restored by Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt — the Army-Navy ...
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