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Watchdog to investigate Hegseth’s sharing of airstrike info on Signal
The Defense Inspector General's Office will look into whether the defense secretary improperly shared sensitive information on the commercial app.
Why a self-reliant Iraqi military may take ‘years, if not decades’ and could require a ‘generation’ to reform
ISIS fighters have shifted from cities to increased violent attacks in rural areas, including regular assassinations of tribal leaders and village elders.
By Todd South
Racial bias probed at Coast Guard Academy
The Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general is investigating allegations of racial discrimination at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy and inadequate follow-up by the school’s leadership, the agency said Thursday.
DoD hasn’t followed CENTCOM deployment requirements for advisers heading to Afghanistan, report says
The Department of Defense has not been following through on adviser training for its service members before deploying them to Afghanistan, a government watchdog reported.
By Kyle Rempfer
NATO chiefs urges Russia to shed light on new missile system
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg is urging Russia to provide details about a new missile system the United States and other allies claim violates an important nuclear weapons treaty.
Fired Air Force one-star made inappropriate comments about women, failed to report suicide attempts
Brig. Gen. Paul Tibbets IV is being forced to retire.
NATO chief: Nuclear buildup unlikely despite missile dispute
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said Wednesday that allies blame Russia for violating an important Cold War-era missile treaty but he does not expect them to deploy more nuclear warheads in Europe in response.
Putin says Russia will target nations hosting US missiles
Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Wednesday that if the United States deploys intermediate-range missiles in Europe, Russia will have to target the nations that would host them.
US general wounded in Taliban attack that killed 2 Afghan leaders
The Pentagon has confirmed that U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Smiley was shot in a Taliban attack that killed two Afghan leaders in Kandahar province last week.
Few female Marines are joining the infantry, but that was expected, top Marine says
113 enlisted women and 29 officers currently are serving in previously closed jobs across the Corps.
By Shawn Snow
Counterinsurgency is here to stay: Marines plan to double foreign military training adviser group
Neller says he plans to double its size and rename it the Marine Advisor Group.
By Shawn Snow