Arleigh Burke Class Destroyer Named For Medal of Honor Recipient
The Navy didn’t just name a ship after Kyle Carpenter—they forged steel around the kind of courage that throws itself on a grenade to save a brother.
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The Navy didn’t just name a ship after Kyle Carpenter—they forged steel around the kind of courage that throws itself on a grenade to save a brother.
They don’t wear tuxedos or sip martinis, but the men and women of the Special Reconnaissance Regiment are the closest thing the British military has to real-world secret agents—armed with cameras, carbines, and a license to disappear.
It wasn’t enemy fire that dropped five soldiers to the ground—it was a supply sergeant with a sidearm and a grudge no one saw coming.
Trump eyes Putin talks, India fights back on tariffs, and Sudan’s war deepens. Catch today’s key headlines in SOFREP’s Morning Brief.
‘Alligator Alcatraz’ under legal fire, Trump’s envoy meets Putin, and Spain says no to F-35s. Here’s your evening brief for August 6, 2025.
An active shooter incident at Fort Stewart triggered a rapid lockdown today, putting emergency protocols—and the nerves of everyone involved—to a critical test.
Hamas isn’t fighting for freedom—they’re a death cult that turns ceasefires into reload breaks and children into human shields.
Extortion 17 wasn’t brought down by some grand conspiracy or hidden failure—it was a tragic, rare hit by enemy fighters who happened to be in the right place at the right time with a lucky shot.
We were fighting a war without a front line, where cruelty was as much a weapon as any rifle, and the enemy’s strength lay in finding the weakest point to strike.
Iran executions, UN Gaza tensions, and a US space tech push. Here’s what’s driving the headlines this Wednesday morning, August 6, 2025.
Netanyahu eyes Gaza push, Lebanon targets Hezbollah, and NATO boosts Ukraine. Here’s what’s making headlines this Tuesday evening.
In a world where Russia bellows bravado and breaks treaties, the U.S. answers with silent, deep-sea patience—four to five Ohio-class submarines are lurking in the shadows, each armed with dozens of warheads, holding the still-fragile threads of deterrence tight as New START’s expiration looms next year.