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 U.S. Coast Guard awarded a contract worth up to $3 billion to an Australian shipbuilding company's U.S. branch to turn out up to 11 new offshore patrol cutters, intended to replace ships that are up to 50 years old.
A senior soldier killed by a lightning strike that also injured eight others this week during training at Fort Gordon in Georgia was remembered as a loving husband and father who deeply loved his country.
The Marine Corps is pulling its amphibious troop carriers out of the water while it investigates why two of them were disabled in training accidents this week during exercises at Camp Pendleton off the coast of Southern California.
A House Democrat from Hawaii is pushing to strip the military decorations -- including 20 Medals of Honor -- from U.S. soldiers who took part in the Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890, where nearly 300 Lakota Sioux people were killed at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.
The U.S. is shipping four additional HIMARS launchers to Ukraine as part of its latest package of military assistance to counter Russia. It will include artillery ammunition and rockets and be the 16th drawdown of firepower from the Pentagon's own inventory since last August. Ukraine will have 16 HIMARS from the U.S. and four more rocket launchers from other allied countries.
The United States is shipping four additional rocket launchers to Ukraine as part of the latest package of military assistance to counter Russia's five-month-long invasion, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Wednesday following a virtual meeting of officials from more than 30 allied countries assisting Ukraine in the fight.
South Korea joined an exclusive club this week when its KF-21 Boramae fighter jet took to the sky for the first time. It is now one of the few countries to have developed and successfully flown a homegrown advanced supersonic fighter.
The United States has officially designated the governments of Syria, Iran, North Korea and Cuba as state sponsors of international terrorism. On Tuesday, Ukraine's defense minister said Russia's actions on the battlefield following their invasion almost five months ago justify adding the Kremlin to the list.
A female pilot will be performing thrilling aerobatic maneuvers like the Diamond Dirty Loop and the Delta Roll as a member of the Navy's famed Blue Angels flight demonstration team for the first time since the group was created in 1946.
Russia's defense minister told his generals that knocking out Ukraine's long-range missiles supplied by the U.S. and other NATO allies should be their priority, indicating that Moscow believes weapons, such as the American-made M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, are playing a critical role on the battlefield.
The U.S. government has approved another round of military aid to Taiwan amid increasing pressure from communist China, which claims the self-governing island democracy as part of its territory.
The decades-long "space race" between the U.S. and the former Soviet Union effectively ended in July 1969 when NASA astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped off his spacecraft and left a footprint on the surface of the Moon.
The Pentagon says testing on an Air Force hypersonic weapon is ready to move into the next phase after a second successful launch this week off the coast of California.
Russian troops in the disputed Donbas region of Ukraine have achieved "no significant territorial advances" over the last 72 hours, despite having launched a number of artillery strikes across a broad front and assaults by platoon and company-sized units onto the battlefield to gauge Ukrainian resistance, British intelligence officials said Thursday.
A corporal from Volgograd is believed to be the first female Russian soldier to have been killed in Ukraine since the start of the invasion ordered by President Vladimir Putin more than four months ago, media reported Wednesday.
The Navy is dismissing Chinese claims that it had "driven away" a U.S. warship operating near a set of disputed islands in the South China Sea, the latest development in a tense region where such international standoffs are becoming increasingly frequent.
A drone strike killed a senior leader of the Islamic State and injured another on Tuesday in northwest Syria, officials with U.S. Central Command said.
The U.S.-led mission to expel Iraqi invaders from Kuwait began on Jan. 17, 1991, with a massive aerial and naval bombardment that lasted five weeks. It was followed by a massive ground assault into Iraq and Kuwait that lasted 100 hours until Iraq capitulated.
Navy officials said neither foul play nor suicide appears to have played a role in the death of a sailor aboard an aircraft carrier based in San Diego.