News

A statue of a Confederate general that demonstrators toppled in Washington, D.C., in 2020 will be reinstalled.
The National Park Service said it is aiming to have the restored statue of Albert Pike reinstalled by October.
It’s part of a congressional probe lawmakers believe may show links to President Donald Trump and other former top officials.
The National Park Service said the move aligns with President Donald Trump's executive orders to reinstate preexisting statues.
As the Pentagon reorients toward a China-focused force posture, the debate over the balance between political signaling and ...
The US National Park Service will restore and reinstall the statue of a Confederate military officer in Washington, DC, after ...
The relationship between the National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration can frequently be ...
U.S. military ties with long-time allies in the Middle East are being tested by China's growing defense diplomacy across the ...
Efforts to honor the president and Massachusetts native with a memorial in Washington have faltered before. This time, ...
Pike was commissioned in the Confederate army as a brigadier general, but his wartime career lasted less than two years. His ...
Born in 1970 and now in his mid-50s, Anderson is the first Air Force officer to lead AFRICOM in the command’s 18-year history ...
A marathon of recent public hearings highlighted a rift over the investigation into the fatal midair crash in January between ...