War Articles | War History

A Savage & Brutal Affair. Hand-To-Hand Combat in WW1

Jay Hemmings

In trench combat, any encounter you had with an enemy soldier was likely to be a life-or-death one. The First World War is notorious for…

Against all Odds-The US Rangers & Their Heroic Assault on Pointe Du Hoc

Billy Moncure

The Assault on Pointe Du Hoc was one of the most harrowing (and costly) missions in U.S. Army Ranger history. Knowing their mission was crucial…

Amazonian Warriors of the Ancient Worlds

Women warriors of the ancient world Warfare has traditionally been a man’s world. The reasons for this varies historically and culturally but, regardless of time…

Major-General Gubbins-The Man who Made Dirty Warfare a Passion.

During the Second World War, Britain’s Special Operations Executive (SOE) reinvented the art of covert warfare. The organization recruited, trained, and equipped both secret agents…

Does Size Really Matter? – The Big Guns of WW1

Conan White

The Big Guns-1914 to 1918 World War One was the first industrialized war that was on a truly global scale. With mass production and ever…

General Orde Wingate: Brilliant Eccentric

The British armed forces in WWII were famous for a number of reasons: innovation, unreal stubbornness in defense, and much else. They were also known…

To Do My Duty. The Scout Master & Hitler’s Nuclear Program

In the early twentieth century, a British man named Baden Powell founded the Boy Scout Movement. From this humble organization, Scouting spread across the globe.…

The Tupolev Tu-128: The Largest Fighter Aircraft to Ever be in Service

In the early decades of the Cold War, threats of potential nuclear air attacks were familiar on both sides of the tension. Both the Soviet…

The Right Decision? Heroic End Of French Fleet – Scuttled 77 Ships To Avoid Capture By Nazi Germany

It was exactly 4:00 AM on November 27, 1942. A thick veil of darkness was lingering over the skies of Toulon, but the city’s inhabitants were…

Tokyo Mose & the Ear Medal – The Irreverent Antidote to Tokyo Rose

Iva Toguri, a Japanese woman born in the US, became well-known during World War II as “Tokyo Rose,” one of the hosts of The Zero…

Hanbury Crater: 4000 Tons of Bombs, Million Rounds & Britain’s biggest WWII Explosion

Elly Farelly

On November 27, 1944, at 11:11 AM the quiet English countryside was rocked by one of the most deadly explosions to occur to occur during…

The Marine The Viet Cong Couldn’t Break He Was Last Seen On a Jungle Trail in November 1967

Jay Hemmings

Of all the bad things that could happen to an American soldier during the Vietnam War, becoming a prisoner of war in the hands of…