Military family advocates, volunteers pack boxes of household supplies for new Fort Cavazos families

Roughly two dozen workers from a food distribution company spent Wednesday morning packing 240 boxes filled with dry goods, toiletries and household supplies to help newly arrived military families at Fort Cavazos.

USS New York is a living memorial to 9/11

The USS New York never forgets the events of 9/11. The ship, commissioned Nov. 7, 2009, cuts through the sea with a bow forged from 7½ tons of World Trade Center steel recovered from Ground Zero.

US military and allies have found over 100 mines in the Black Sea, Navy says

More than 100 mines have been spotted by U.S. military reconnaissance aircraft and allies in the Black Sea since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine more than two years ago, the commanding officer of U.S. 6th Fleet said this week.

Another US military chief makes public gesture for ally Philippines

Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Eric Smith pledged this week to help the Philippine military develop capabilities to monitor its sea territory amid ongoing coast guard clashes with China, the latest top U.S. military officer to pledge support on behalf of the Philippines.

Submarine USS Georgia arrives in the Middle East region

The USS Georgia — an Ohio-class, ballistic-missile submarine — joins two carrier strike groups in the Middle East, the USS Theodore Roosevelt and the USS Abraham Lincoln.

Westover Air Reserve Base personnel, local officials mull response to hypothetical EMP attack

An exercise at the Chicopee Safety Complex had participants mulling the regional response to a potential EMP attack, which could knock out power transformers and satellite communications. Officials from the Pentagon, Homeland Security and other federal agencies were in attendance or monitoring online.

Staff shortages and training faults hamper Navy ship upkeep at sea, sailors tell GAO

The Navy doesn’t have enough manpower and training to keep its ships in shape for combat, a government watchdog agency said after interviewing sailors across the fleet.

US airman being investigated in connection with Venice nightclub stabbing

A U.S. airman is under investigation after a weekend stabbing outside a Venice nightclub left a young man hospitalized in serious condition, the Air Force said.

Commander acted in reprisal by nixing deployment after soldier’s sexual assault report, IG says

A soldier who filed a sexual assault complaint ahead of her unit’s deployment was damaged financially by her boss’ reprisal but wasn’t wrongly denied a promotion, Defense Department investigators decided recently.

US sailor accused of knocking down 4 people at Japanese beach faces prison term

Japanese prosecutors asked for a 2½-year prison term for a US sailor who admitted running drunkenly into a group of Japanese pedestrians, seriously injuring four, at a beach in 2022.

Annual DODEA Japan culture swap opens with entrepreneurial exercise

American and Japanese middle and high school students gathered here for a weekend of cultural exchanges and entrepreneurial role-playing.

USS America paused for first South Korea port call after amphibious exercise

The amphibious assault ship USS America stopped in South Korea last week, its first-ever visit to the country in the ship’s nearly 10-year history, the Navy said. 

Sen. Tuberville blocks promotion of defense secretary’s top military aide

Sen. Tommy Tuberville has blocked the promotion of an Army general who is a senior aide to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, threatening a confrontation between the Republican firebrand and the Pentagon, while reviving a months-old furor over the military chief’s medical secrecy.

Robins AFB employee sues service for racial, sexual discrimination

A longtime civilian employee of Robins Air Force Base said he faced repeated discrimination from his bosses at the Georgia military post since they learned he was gay about five years ago, according to a lawsuit that he has filed against Frank Kendall, the service secretary.

Ex-employees of Titanic submersible’s owner to testify before Coast Guard panel

Former employees of the company that owned an experimental submersible that imploded on its way to the wreck of the Titanic are scheduled to testify before a Coast Guard investigatory board at an upcoming hearing.

Watchdog challenges SOCOM’s plan to buy new armed aircraft to watch over special ops troops

The Pentagon should further analyze the capabilities of the new aircraft that defense officials have selected to watch over special operators working in austere environments and consider slowing its purchase of the planes, a federal watchdog warned in a new report.

Purported car rental return creates security incident at NSA Naples

Military police at a U.S. Navy base next to Naples International Airport in Italy stopped a driver who attempted to enter the installation Monday without an identification check, according to officials.

Marines’ training for mortar, rocket systems going virtual to lessen blast effects

The indoor marksmanship trainers at bases in California, North Carolina and Okinawa were previously limited to service rifles, pistols and machine guns. But soon they will include the M252 60mm mortar and the M3A1 shoulder-fired rocket system, known as the MAAWS.

Air National Guard prepares to deploy in KC-46 refueling aircraft’s historic operation

The New Hampshire Air National Guard became the first to receive the new KC-46A Pegasus refueling tankers in 2019, and now history is being made again with the first operational deployment of the aircraft across the entire Air Force to the Middle East.