You think the Cold War is over? Think again. Russian and American forces are still challenging each other in the Arctic by Jon Bowermaster At 12:4 ...
as during the Cold War, are crucial for containing Russian naval forces. Vice Admiral Jan Christian Kaack, the head of Germany’s navy, describes submarines as the «first line of defense ...
These submarines, which cost $5 billion each, featured advanced technologies and capabilities. -However, the end of the Cold War and subsequent defense budget cuts rendered the program less ...
In the Cold War era, the Soviets and Americans prepared both their submarines and carriers, each with revolutionary new designs, for renewed struggle. This article traces the course of the balance ...
A bombshell new report from a UK-based thinktank has warned the country is barely able to protect its own military sites from ...
In the shadow of Point Sur Lighthouse along California's Big Sur Coast, the Point Sur Naval Facility, once one of the world’s most secretive sites, played a pivotal role in Cold War espionage.
The hijacking crisis of September 1970 occurred against the backdrop of a decades-long Cold War between the planet's two strongest nations. Although the United States and Soviet Union had begun ...
continues to harbor American and Russian nuclear submarines and bombers equipped with long-range cruise missiles. Neither country has retargeted its Arctic ICBMs away from their Cold War positionings.
The naval facility was one of 30 top-secret sites worldwide built during the Cold War. The goal was to detect Soviet submarines using the classified sound surveillance system, or SOSUS ...