Mike Glenn grew up on Navy bases as the son of a career sailor but then decided to annoy his father and joined the Army after he graduated from high school in the Dallas area. He did a hitch as an enlisted soldier in Germany during the Cold War, where he spent a considerable amount of time in the field on maneuvers. After leaving the Army, he moved back home to northeast Texas and entered the University of Texas at Arlington where he studied history. He also took Army ROTC classes at UT Arlington and upon graduation received a commission as a Second Lieutenant. He was assigned to the 3rd Cavalry Regiment at Fort Bliss in El Paso and took his platoon to the Middle East where he fought in the Gulf War. He got into journalism after Operation Desert Storm and has worked at newspapers and magazines throughout Texas. He joined The Washington Times from the Houston Chronicle. He can be reached at mglenn@washingtontimes.com.
The daring U.S. mission to capture Nicolas Maduro took root months ago with the insertion into Caracas of a team of CIA operatives and culminated in the early morning hours of Saturday with a surgical strike on the Venezuelan capital that involved hundreds of aircraft, ships and elite U.S. soldiers who stormed the dictator's heavily guarded safe house to take him and his wife into custody.
Moscow will continue to support Venezuela's government despite the U.S. capture of the country's dictator, Nicolas Maduro, Russian government officials said.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Sunday the U.S. quarantine on Venezuelan oil will continue until the Trump administration confirms that the remaining members of the government in Caracas are acting in the interest of the U.S. and for the benefit of Venezuelans.
A former Russian lawmaker aligned with President Vladimir Putin signed an army contract to fight in Ukraine last month rather than spend 13 years in prison following his conviction in a gangland slaying, according to the independent news agency Verstka.
Israel is suspending several international aid organizations from operating inside the Gaza Strip because they won't comply with recently enacted registration rules, including fully identifying those who will be working for them inside the Palestinian enclave.
The Coast Guard has awarded its first contracts to build polar icebreakers as part of a $6.1 billion trilateral partnership with the U.S., Canada and Finland.
More than three decades after declaring independence from Somalia, the breakaway region of Somaliland last week exchanged diplomatic greetings with Israel, the first country to recognize the autonomous territory as a sovereign state.
French President Emmanuel Macron slammed the U.S. government's visa restrictions on European Union officials involved in what Washington said are attempts to coerce U.S.-based social media platforms to censor viewpoints they oppose.
The Trump-class battleships that President Trump unveiled recently at his Mar-a-Lago estate will be lighter and shorter than their Iowa-class counterparts, which now mostly serve as floating museums. However, the USS Defiant, the first ship in the class, will be larger than any Navy surface combatant built since the end of World War II.
The London School of Economics and Political Science reported last March that at least 2,470 residents of Buryatia -- one of the poorest regions in Russia -- had been killed in action since the start of the war.
A car bomb explosion on Monday killed a senior Russian army officer in Moscow in an operation that may have been orchestrated by Ukraine, Russian officials said.
Some of the Army troops deployed to the U.S.-Mexico border as part of the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration were forced to live in substandard conditions, according to a report released this week by the Pentagon's inspector general.
The Navy launched its first one-way attack drone from the deck of a warship operating in the Middle East this week, marking what military officials said was a "significant milestone" in its ability to deliver a full range of unmanned combat power.
The sanctions against Russia for invading Ukraine could have hobbled Moscow's war effort from the start had they been applied more strictly and with better cooperation from the West, according to a 2024 Nobel laureate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
European officials are launching an effort to compensate Kyiv for hundreds of billions of dollars in damages caused by Russia since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
A day after at least 15 people celebrating Hanukkah were gunned down at a popular beach in Australia in what authorities said was an antisemitic terrorist attack, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Monday vowed to further tighten the country's already-strict firearms laws.