
Latest ""


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
Power couple: Wife of airman who survived most catastrophic wounds in history vying for cover of Maxim magazine
Brian lost both legs and his dominant right hand when a 107mm rocket exploded just three feet away.
By J.D. Simkins
Putting Marines at risk: How shocking flight medic training gaps could endanger grunts on the ground
Scarce Navy, Marine Corps flight medics are on the front lines with insufficient training.
By Shawn Snow
DoD exploring medevac options for special operations forces within Yemen
The U.S. military is looking for contractors to provide airborne casualty evacuation services for special operations forces working “primarily within Yemen.”
By Kyle Rempfer
Medal of Honor recipient Michael Novosel saved more than 5,000 in Vietnam ― including his son
“Dustoff.” In 1963 that was the call sign for helicopter pilots who pioneered emergency medical evacuations during the Vietnam War. About 3,000 pilots and crewmen flew unarmed air ambulances, often into heavy fire, to medevac more than 100,000 severely wounded men, and 33 percent became casualties themselves.
By Doug Sterner. Vietnam Magazine