Ben Wolfgang is a national security correspondent at The Washington Times, a senior member of its Threat Status team, and the host and producer of the award-winning Threat Status Podcast. Ben covers national security, foreign policy, military affairs, the defense industry and the rapidly evolving landscape of military technology. A Pennsylvania native, he joined The Washington Times in 2011 after serving as a political reporter at The Republican-Herald in Pottsville, Pa. Over the course of his career, Ben has covered the White House, Congress, and four presidential campaigns. His reporting has earned recognition from some of journalism's most respected organizations, including the Virginia Press Association and the Society of Professional Journalists' Washington, D.C. Chapter, among other honors. Ben has interviewed heads of state, chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, senior military commanders, cabinet secretaries, senior government officials, and the CEOs of many of the nation's largest and most influential defense companies. Ben is a frequent guest on broadcast media, with appearances on C-SPAN, the Sirius XM POTUS channel, and other outlets. He can be reached at bwolfgang@washingtontimes.com.
The U.S. will station another 500 troops in Germany as part of a new "multi-domain task force," Pentagon officials said Tuesday, officially closing the book on former President Trump's ill-fated plan to move thousands of American troops out of the country.
The Pentagon is ramping up its war against an enemy declared "territorially defeated" two years ago, fueling questions about whether the U.S. and its allies have the right long-term strategy to truly crush the Islamic State terrorist group once and for all.
Pope Francis on Sunday took aim at global military spending during the COVID-19 pandemic, using his annual Easter message at the Vatican to call on nations around the world to redirect some of their defense budgets toward programs for the poor.
If you see an Islamic State fighter in Iraq or Syria, the U.S. military wants to know about it.
The American-led Operation Inherent Resolve (OIR) coalition on Friday tweeted out a pair of phone numbers that citizens in Iraq and Syria can call to report ISIS extremists in their area.
The U.S. and Iran said Friday they'll participate in indirect negotiations aimed at resurrecting an Obama-era deal that limited Tehran's nuclear weapons program, marking a major turning point for the Biden administration's diplomatic outreach to the Islamic republic.
As part of a female engagement team in Afghanistan, Stephanie Vazquez, the medically retired Army sergeant and mother of two, was given a critical mission: to gather information from Afghan women, who were culturally barred from speaking directly with male soldiers but were routinely used as pawns by the enemy.
The Army is moving forward with a cutting-edge program to give tens of thousands of service members augmented-reality headsets in a move that could transform how soldiers fight the wars of tomorrow.
Satellite images taken Tuesday show new activity at the Yongbyon Radiochemistry Laboratory, a key facility in North Korea's nuclear weapons program, fueling suspicion that North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un is seeking to put public pressure on President Biden and wants to force the U.S. to make diplomatic concessions.
The Suez Canal reopened for business Monday after salvage crews freed a massive container ship that spent the past week blocking the crucial waterway, while stakeholders around the world -- including China, Russia and even American political advocacy groups -- seized on the incident to push their own agendas.
The Army is under fire from Muslim civil rights groups and advocacy organizations that say the Pentagon is promoting anti-Islam "bigotry" with a recent news article that tells the story of an Iraqi woman who joined the U.S. military as an interpreter and later converted from Islam to Christianity.
The Pentagon's vaunted F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program, a key cog in the U.S. military's 21st-century battle plan, is facing brutal blowback from all corners amid seemingly never-ending production delays and an eye-popping price tag of $1.7 trillion and climbing.
The Taliban on Friday threatened "death and destruction" against U.S. forces unless all Americans leave Afghanistan by May 1, adding new pressure to President Biden as he weighs whether to honor the looming deadline.
President Biden on Thursday vowed the U.S. and its allies will "respond accordingly" after the second round of North Korean missile tests in less than a week.
President Biden on Thursday laid down a broad marker for America's troubled military mission in Afghanistan, virtually ruling out a U.S. troop presence beyond this year while suggesting he's prepared to brush aside the May 1 withdrawal deadline put in place by President Trump.
The U.S. military and its Iraqi partners this month launched a major offensive against the remnants of the Islamic State in Iraq, unleashing 312 airstrikes and a ground assault that killed at least 27 terrorists.
Turkey's purchase and installation of the Russian-made S-400 missile defense system is a "done deal" despite vehement U.S. objections, top Turkish officials said Wednesday, once again openly defying Washington and deepening a rift between the NATO allies.
North Korea's short-range missile tests last weekend fall within the bounds of "normal military activity" and will not halt U.S. efforts to restart diplomatic engagement with Pyongyang, Biden administration officials said Tuesday evening.
Congress is poised to begin unwinding two decades of virtually unchecked White House war powers and to overhaul authorities that critics say have been abused by presidents of both parties.
China on Tuesday threatened retaliation against the U.S. over sanctions that targeted Beijing's alleged human rights abuses in Xinjiang province, with top Chinese officials vowing that America and its allies "will pay a price for their ignorance and arrogance."
The latest version of the Army Combat Fitness Test (ACFT) will be gender-neutral in how performance is measured but will establish separate ranked tier systems for men and women, military officials said Monday as they rolled out the latest tweak to the Army's physical performance standards.