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Three officers facing disciplinary action over SEAL trainee’s death
The three officers were notified last week that they face admiral's mast in connection to the 2022 training death of Kyle Mullen.
SEAL shenanigans in the spotlight (again)
Investigators are probing an Independence Day party in Iraq that allegedly went sideways.
By Carl Prine
How the Navy built a better jet
Faced with an air superiority gap compared to Air Force jets in the late 1940s and early 1950s, the Navy embarked on an ambitious aircraft development program that produced one of the world’s best all-around fighters.
By E.R. Johnson, Aviation History Magazine
Sailor sentenced for deadly Coronado Bridge accident
Richard Sepolio, who wore his Navy uniform, apologized for the crash during his sentencing Thursday.
Meet the admiral who leads from a wheelchair
Rear Adm. Kyle Cozad won't give up this fight.
By Mark D. Faram
What comes next for the Navy’s second oldest carrier?
Abraham Lincoln went out, Ike came back in.
By Mark D. Faram
This is where you need to eat in the Navy
The Navy doled out the Capt. Edward F. Ney awards for excellence in food preparation and service.
By Mark D. Faram
SEALs revive stealthy submarine delivery team in Virginia
The move is designed to boost SEAL operations on the East Coast and in Europe.
By Mark D. Faram
This is why a San Diego jury found a sailor guilty of manslaughter in bridge plunge deaths
Prosecutors said the tragedy began with a sailor who had been drinking on Oct. 15, 2016, and was arguing with his girlfriend — now his wife — by cellphone when he tried to speed past another car on the San Diego-Coronado Bridge.
How the Navy plans to deal with drug use and war crimes allegations in the SEAL community
Command's leader promises "hard discussions" about what's causing a series of scandals in the SEAL community.
New legal bombshells explode on two Navy SEAL war crimes cases
Two SEALs offer up damaging testimony against a chief special warfare operator accused of war crimes -- and suggest the command did not initially investigate the sprawling allegations of misconduct, new legal documents show.
By Carl Prine