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.
An aircraft safety team from the Army's aviation center will launch a detailed investigation into a deadly helicopter crash that resulted in the death of nine soldiers during a training flight near a post on the border between Kentucky and Tennessee.
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin told lawmakers that he has "no regrets" about how the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan was carried out, despite the quick toppling of the U.S.-backed government and the August 2021 suicide bombing at Hamid Karzai International Airport that killed 13 U.S. troops and at least 170 Afghan civilians.
More than one-quarter of military families said they would steer relatives away from the armed forces, due to what they said was poor leadership and systemic challenges to those who serve, such as a lack of spousal employment opportunities.
Russia is staging wide-scale military exercises in Siberia involving its strategic missile forces in a show of nuclear strength amid the fighting in Ukraine following Moscow's invasion more than a year ago.
The Biden administration's defense budget isn't keeping pace with a rapidly accelerating Chinese military buildup or even the current rate of inflation in the United States, top Republicans on Capitol Hill said Tuesday.
Russian troops are making only "marginal progress" in efforts to encircle the town of Avdiivka in Ukraine's disputed Donetsk region while taking heavy losses, including the destruction of several armored vehicles, UK officials said Tuesday.
The Department of Justice has filed charges against a Russian suspected of being an intelligence officer who attempted to infiltrate the International Criminal Court in The Hague with a bogus Brazilian passport.
The Army says it is "deeply concerned" after a Hollywood star hired to narrate commercials in its new multimillion-dollar recruiting strategy was arrested over the weekend in a domestic violence case.
Iranian-backed proxies launched a barrage of rockets at a base in northeast Syria where U.S. forces are based as part of their mission to defeat the Islamic State terror network. The attack occurred shortly after 8 a.m. Friday, local time, and targeted coalition forces at Green Village, officials said.
The head of the Wagner Group mercenary force may be shifting his focus away from the battlefield in Ukraine back to Africa, where in the past they have conducted operations in countries such as Sudan and Mali, according to the Moscow Times newspaper.
Slovakia will get a fleet of U.S.-made attack helicopters in exchange for transferring its retired MiG-29 jet fighters to Ukraine. The deal also includes helicopter training and maintenance support along with ammunition, including the AGM-114 Hellfire II missile, the country's defense minister said this week.
A tight job market, a depleted candidate pool and the lingering aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic are making for a grim recruiting environment for the nation's military services, top Pentagon officials told a Senate hearing Wednesday.
The Defense Department is fast-tracking the delivery of M-1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine, drawing on older, refurbished models that can be delivered to the battlefield by the fall, Pentagon officials confirmed Tuesday.
Fort Pickett, a National Guard base near Blackstone, Virginia, this week will be the first Army post to change its name under a congressionally mandated policy to purge public references to the Confederacy in the U.S. military.
Kyiv has no plans to pull out of Bakhmut. Ukrainian officials say it's not just a matter of what the loss would mean for the public's morale. The city's defense, they say, is linked to a planned spring offensive that could commence within weeks as the weather warms.
President Biden's proposed $842 billion defense budget for fiscal year 2024 focuses on countering China in Asia and Russia in Ukraine, but also targets a problem closer to home: U.S. armaments stockpiles that are running low as they strain to keep Ukraine armed against the Russian invaders.
Russia fired an "unusually large" number of Kh-47M2 Kinzhal hypersonic missiles as part of a wave of long-range airstrikes that targeted critical Ukrainian infrastructure and killed at least 11 civilians, British defense officials said Friday.
Saudi Arabia and arch-rival Iran agreed to resume diplomatic relations and reopen embassies within two months following talks this week brokered by China, which maintains close relations with both countries.
Military spending would hit $842 billion in fiscal year 2024, a $26 billion increase over 2023 and nearly $100 billion higher than the 2022 baseline, under a budget released Thursday by President Biden, but GOP critics quickly said the increase was too small to meet the country's security challenges.