War crimes prosecutor seeks arrest of Israeli and Hamas leaders, including Netanyahu

The International Criminal Court’s prosecutor said on Monday he had requested arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his defense chief and three Hamas leaders over alleged war crimes.

General says he warned that Afghanistan would get ‘very bad, very fast’

Austin Scott Miller, the last four-star U.S. commander based in Kabul, met privately with House lawmakers scrutinizing the Biden administration’s Afghanistan exit.

From Normandy to now: Lessons of D-Day for today’s America, 80 years later

D-Day — and its fellow defining battles across American history — illustrate the stakes, the resources and the will that it takes for a fighting force to win, when a loss (or failure to act) threatens borders, democracies, innocence and history.

I’m an American doctor stuck in Gaza. As Israel moves into Rafah, where will physicians and our patients go?

As an American doctor, I felt called to help Palestinians who have faced a collapsing health care system in Gaza. My first trip was in March and I returned for another mission earlier this month, before the Israeli military assault on Rafah, in southern Gaza, which has been catastrophic. Now we have no way out.

Help is available for transitioning military families facing the ‘Deadly Gap’

As we navigate through the next few months dedicated to mental health awareness, PTSD awareness, and military appreciation, it is critical to shed light on the Deadly Gap, offer support, and gain an understanding of the challenges our military families face as they transition out of active duty military service.

‘A moment of challenge’: US and its allies meet Monday to discuss Ukraine’s air defense

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Monday that defending against aerial attacks is critical for Ukrainian forces fighting off surging Russia invaders and urged allies to come up with more air-defense weapons to send the embattled country.

Fat Leonard bribery cases fall apart because of prosecution blunders

A pattern of prosecutorial misconduct in the Fat Leonard investigation has caused several cases to unravel so far and is threatening to undermine more.

New bridge in Seoul, 1957

Seoul, South Korea, November 1957: The marching band of the Republic of Korea Army parades proudly across the new bridge at ceremonies on the day it was officially opened.

Trilateral coast guard training would be first among US, Japan, South Korea

Coast guard vessels from the United States, Japan and South Korea will reportedly train together for the first time next month.