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This author sees opportunity for US in competition with China, Russia
The U.S. could get this moment right, or squander the opportunity.
By Todd South
Veteran peer-support helps prevent crises
Peer support provides veterans that sense of immediate trust, and gives them a confidant they can connect with, the author of this commentary says.
By Mark Graham
The Army’s outgoing leadership: Where the service stands, and where it’s aiming
“We’re not where we need to be," Gen. Mark Milley said of the work toward one of the Army's primary goals.
By Kyle Rempfer
Alaska gets Army Pacific chief of staff as new commander
The two-star's Army career includes seven overseas deployments.
By Kyle Rempfer
4-star: Ship deployments, more high-level exercises could help stabilize Latin America
In U.S. Southern Command, the National Defense Strategy is as much about combating local corruption as competing with Russia and China.
Does your combat experience even matter against Chinese and Russian troops?
To boost American morale in the face of a rising China and resurgent Russia, some pundits point to the U.S. military’s surplus of combat experience and large-scale logistical expertise in massing forces.
By Kyle Rempfer
Great Powers on Ice: Coast Guard drops Arctic manifesto
The coastal defense service has been lobbying for an increased focus on America’s Arctic territorial waters.
By Kyle Rempfer
Unique combat assets in the Reserve may mean a force restructure for the entire Army, chief says
Without real strategic decisions some of the Reserve assets may need to go to the active side, he says.
By Todd South
This local program helps vets prepare their taxes — for free
Veterans in the greater Los Angeles area have an opportunity to take advantage of a free program where veterans can receive help with their taxes from their fellow veterans.
By Joshua Axelrod
The Army is scaling back its projected growth plans
The Army scaled back its five-year growth plans in the proposed budget released Tuesday.
By Tara Copp, AP
DoD officials: Irregular warfare will no longer suffer a ‘boom-bust’ cycle in eras of great power competition
The Defense Department doesn’t want to lose its irregular warfare edge, honed through more than a decade of conflict across the Middle East, even as it directs its armed forces to refocus on state-level adversaries.
By Kyle Rempfer