The Air Force has zombie F-35s it keeps using long after they’re dead
Even in death, the F-35 continues to serve.
Even in death, the F-35 continues to serve.
It might be time to try something different.
A comedian named Caroline Kennedy asked her fiancé, an Air Force F-35 pilot, all the fighter pilot questions the rest of us are too afraid to think about asking.
No cause of death was reported, but foul play or suicide are not suspected.
The Navy is reviewing whether or not to even decide to recover the jet.
Brand new HIMARS are sharing the field with World War I-style trenches and repurposed old motorcycles.
The USS Scranton’s now ex-CO joins more than half a dozen other officers relieved of command.
“If I have a soldier that’s been in the Army for five years, you can’t buy back that experience from them.”
We asked, and you answered.
While NCOs are considered the backbone of the military, the Air Force's backbone might have grown a bit too heavy in recent years.
“We just wanted to have our little spin on it and do it our way.”
An Army official said the situation “did not meet the criteria” for emergency leave.
"We in the killin’ Nazi business. And cousin, business is a-boomin."
While China clearly is the pacing threat, that does not mean that conflict will take the form of a high-intensity war in the Pacific.
Not your typical air-to-air kill.
The Blue Angels tweaked the low-flying "sneak pass" after the sonic airflow from one of its jets shook up a Navy building in California last year.
The service is moving away from the past and training for future operations against China and Russia.
The award is typically given to service members for “exceptionally outstanding conduct.”
Keep posting, but keep it positive.
America’s military is being stretched to the breaking point, and our current operational footprint only increases the chances of a flashpoint incident spiraling into a conflict we can no longer support, leaving us vulnerable to near-peer competitors.