War Articles | War History

Edokko: Touching Story of Jewish Refugee in WWII Japan

A memoir from a New York Man Who Grew Up a Jewish Refugee in World War II Japan and Worked with the US Military as…

Forgotten Meat Grinder: The Battle of Hurtgen Forest WWII

It was some of the most brutal fighting of the Second World War, a grinding battle in which thousands of American and German lives were…

The Trinidad Plan – Eisenhower, the CIA, and the Bay of Pigs

In the middle of the Cold War in Central America, a battle was fought, that could drastically change the geopolitics of the entire region by…

The Best Gun of WWII – Flak 88 in photos

The Flak 88 was a legendary WWII-era anti-air and an anti-tank gun used by Nazi Germany and their allies. The predecessor of this iconic gun…

Unique Cache of Antique Weapons Discovered in Canal

This is the astonishing moment a cache of guns was pulled out of a canal by a family of magnet-fishers. The Price family couldn’t believe…

British Commando and WWII Hero Laid to Rest

On July 18, 2018, England’s Patrick Churchill, age 94, was honored at a funeral held at St. Mary The Virgin Church in Witney, Oxfordshire.  Churchill,…

Voices of the Flemish Waffen-SS – The Final Testament of the Oostfronters

What motivated men to fight for an enemy that had invaded their own country? These are last voices of the Flemish Waffen-SS; there are very…

Youngest RAF Spitfire Pilot in Battle of Britain Passes away at 97

Geoffrey ‘Boy’ Wellum was the Second World War’s youngest Spitfire pilot.  He joined the RAF at eighteen and died two weeks after his 97th birthday…

Andrew Jackson – Politician General in War of 1812

In the years leading up to 1812, the United States had become entangled in the conflict between the United Kingdom and France; Great Britain banned…

Remember That Time Israel Stole a MiG 21?

The Mossad is well known and considered one of the elite intelligence institutions in the world. The organization has accomplished many incredible feats over the…

Revolutionaries or Privateers? – The Birth of the U.S. Navy

At the start of the American Revolution, shipbuilding grew in the Colonies because of raw materials and the many native white pine trees greater than…

The German Extermination Conveyor at Babi Yar

On September 29, 1941, the streets of occupied Kiev were filled with thousands of women, old people and children carrying valuable things. According to the…