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A team of scientists discovered a Japanese naval destroyer for the first time since it was sunk by American troops in World War II.
Almost 90 US B-29 bombers dropped about 6,000 tons of napalm on Kumagaya, Japan, on the night of August 14-15, 1945. Eighty years later, the scars of that American firebombing remain.
The Imperial Japanese Navy destroyer Teruzuki was discovered more than 2,600 feet below the ocean's surface near the Solomon Islands.
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Straight Arrow News on MSNChina expands military operations across the Pacific: ReportChina is expanding its military footprint across the Pacific, conducting simultaneous aircraft carrier drills and dispatching naval vessels into new waters, according to a new report by The Wall ...
The Wisconsin Maritime Museum allows guests to sleep on the USS Cobia, a World War II submarine it lists on Airbnb.
One of the most iconic photographs of WW2 taken by Joe Rosenthal of the Associated Press on February 23, 1945 won a Pulitzer ...
On Nov. 30, 1942, the USS New Orleans was in the middle of a pitched battle off of Guadalcanal. A Japanese torpedo scored a ...
From war epics like Band of Brothers to horror gems like The Haunting of Hill House, these are the best miniseries that clock ...
Japan's imperial couple commemorated compatriots who died in internment camps after the end of World War II during the first ...
Emperor Naruhito met with Mongolia's president during a visit to the landlocked nation that marks a step toward closer ...
Special to Wesson News Twenty-seven Mississippi veterans, including two from the Wesson area, along with their guardians travelled to Washington, D.C., last month on a Honor Flight sponsored by ...
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