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 head of the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog agency is warning that North Korea's atomic program is growing at an exponential rate without any international oversight.
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth blamed "disgruntled" former staffers at the Pentagon for leaks to the media about reports that he allegedly shared sensitive military secrets in a second Signal group chat.
President Trump is backing Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth following reports that he included his wife, brother and lawyer in a private chat on the Signal app about planned military strikes in Yemen, White House officials said Monday.
The Defense Department is reducing its military footprint in Syria over the coming weeks and months in a consolidation of forces that reflects a changing security landscape in the country since the fall of President Bashar al-Assad in December.
A government watchdog agency this week confirmed that all diversity, equity and inclusion positions inside the Pentagon have been eliminated. The move marks a major milestone in Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's campaign against an undue focus on race and gender programs in the military.
U.S. forces launched strikes against a Houthi-controlled fuel platform in Yemen in the Trump administration's ongoing mission to end the Iranian-backed military group's ability to threaten maritime traffic in the Red Sea.
Authorities on Thursday were continuing to investigate a vehicle accident near El Paso, Texas, that killed two Marines and seriously injured a third who had been deployed to the southern border region as part of President Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration.
About 1.8 million U.S. troops served in the Korean War theater between 1950 and 1953. On Monday, South Korean officials held a dinner to honor American troops killed on distant battlefields with names like "Old Baldy" and "Battle Mountain" and their now-aging comrades who made it back home.
Israeli troops in the southern Gaza Strip late Sunday discovered a weapons cache inside a school building, where Hamas militants were storing mortars, hand grenades, explosives and other weapons, Israel Defense Forces officials said.
Iranian officials said Sunday they were prepared to meet with the United States next week for a second round of talks in the high-stakes effort to reduce or eliminate Tehran's nuclear capabilities.
The Senate early Friday voted to confirm retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Dan "Razin" Caine as the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, two months after President Trump sacked his predecessor, Air Force Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr.
An Israeli airstrike on the Gaza Strip killed a Hamas militant who led the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on a kibbutz near the Palestinian enclave that left 75 soldiers and civilians dead, Israel Defense Forces officials announced Thursday.
An ex-Facebook executive turned corporate whistleblower told lawmakers Wednesday that her former employer, now called Meta, was so eager to build its business in China and please the country's authoritarian leaders that the social media giant agreed to censor, spy on or shut down user accounts at Beijing's behest.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth slammed China's growing influence in the Western Hemisphere on Wednesday, telling a regional security conference in Panama that Beijing's control of strategic and critical infrastructure in Latin America "cannot and will not stand."
The Pentagon is reaching out to some 8,700 ex-service members who were forced out of the military over the Defense Department's COVID-19 mandate during the Biden administration, offering them their old jobs and the back pay they lost.
The U.S. lacks the defense capacity to meet its own peacetime needs or supply Ukraine with sufficient weapons to fend off Russian invaders, says a report from The Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based conservative think tank.
Huntington Ingalls Industries and the South Korea-based Hyundai Heavy Industries have agreed to collaborate on accelerating ship production in support of defense and commercial priorities, the shipbuilding giants announced Monday.
The Pentagon's independent watchdog announced Thursday that it will launch an investigation into Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's use of the commercial messaging app Signal to discuss upcoming military strikes against Houthi militants in Yemen.