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. is using Ukrainians as proxies as it rushes headlong into an eventual confrontation with Russia, Moscow's ambassador to Washington warned Tuesday after the U.S. announcement of a $200 million security assistance package to Kyiv.
Following his retirement ceremony Monday at the U.S. Naval Academy, Adm. Mike Gilday's photograph was taken down from a display at the Pentagon showing the current members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
An active-duty soldier based in Alaska remains in custody Monday after being charged in the death of his wife, whose body was found after a dayslong search in Anchorage.
A Russian warship on Sunday fired warning shots and boarded a cargo vessel it said was heading to Ukraine in the wake of pulling out of a deal that would allow Kyiv to transport grain through the Black Sea.
The Wagner Group mercenary army is being forced to tighten its belt and cut staff as the fallout continues over founder Yevgeny Prigozhin's short-lived rebellion against Russia's military establishment.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy sacked the directors of Ukraine's regional military recruitment centers as part of a wide-ranging crackdown on corruption in a system that provides urgently needed soldiers for the country's ongoing counteroffensive against Russian occupiers.
Top Pentagon officials are acknowledging that the pace of Ukraine's long-awaited counteroffensive isn't moving as swiftly as some analysts had anticipated following Kyiv's early successes against Russian occupiers.
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin is shuffling his senior military advisers at the Pentagon to fill vacant top-level positions as an ongoing feud with Sen. Tommy Tuberville over the Defense Department's abortion policy shows no signs of resolving.
Russian combat aircraft are forced to operate over territory controlled by Moscow because Ukraine's air defenses are too strong, British officials said this week.
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko wants the Wagner Group Russian mercenary fighters remaining in his country to form the core of a professional "contract army" to help upgrade his military capabilities.
The Pentagon on Tuesday suspended security cooperation with Niger's military following last week's ouster of the country's democratically elected president, a coup that has already prompted several European countries to begin evacuating their citizens.
A top Defense Department official said Beijing continues to rebuff attempts to establish communications with senior leaders in the Pentagon even as China advances its military expansion plans while the U.S. ramps up lethal assistance to Taiwan.
President Biden on Monday ordered that the headquarters for the new U.S. Space Command will stay in Colorado Springs, Colorado, overturning a Trump administration decision to relocate the command to Huntsville, Alabama.
The government of Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni sent a strong signal to China that it plans to walk away from an infrastructure investment plan after her defense chief called the Belt and Road Initiative a "wicked act" signed by a previous administration.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin met with his Australian counterpart in Brisbane on Friday ahead of a ministerial meeting where he will be joined by Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
The Transportation Department this week signed up the first nine commercial ships for its Tanker Security Program, which provides the Pentagon with a fleet of privately owned bulk petroleum carriers.
Intense fighting in Ukraine's western Zaporizhia Oblast this week may be a sign that Kyiv has reached a turning point in its counteroffensive against Russian occupiers. The country's military commanders appear to be pouring thousands of Western-trained and equipped troops into the battle who had been held in reserve for nearly a month.
The Navy will name a future Navajo-class towing, salvage and rescue ship after an American Indian activist from Washington state who spent decades fighting for tribal fishing rights.