- BOOK REVIEW: Maps, tables, notes, index
- BOOK REVIEW: Maps, tables, notes, index
- LEADERSHIP: A Chinese Middle East
- MYANMAR: Myanmar October 2025 Update
- MALI: Mali October 2025 Update
- PARAMILITARY: Pay For Slay Forever
- PHOTO: Javelin Launch at Resolute Dragon
- FORCES: North Koreans Still in Ukraine
- MORALE: Americans Killed by Israelis
- PHOTO: SGT STOUT Air Defense
- YEMEN: Yemen October 2025 Update
- PHOTO: Coming Home to the Nest
- BOOK REVIEW: "No One Wants to be the Last to Die": The Battles of Appomattox, April 8-9, 1865
- SUPPORT: Late 20th Century US Military Education
- PHOTO: Old School, New School
- ON POINT: Trump To Generals: America Confronts Invasion From Within
- SPECIAL OPERATIONS: New Israeli Special Operations Forces
- PHOTO: Marine Training in the Carribean
- FORCES: NATO Versus Russia Showdown
- PHOTO: Bombing Run
- ATTRITION: Ukrainian Drone Shortage
- NBC WEAPONS: Russia Resorts to Chemical Warfare
- PARAMILITARY: Criminals Control Russia Ukraine Border
- SUBMARINES: Russia Gets Another SSBN
- BOOK REVIEW: The Roman Provinces, 300 BCE–300 CE: Using Coins as Sources
- PHOTO: Ghost-X
- ARMOR: Poland Has The Largest Tank Force in Europe
- AIR WEAPONS: American Drone Debacle
- INFANTRY: U.S. Army Moves To Mobile Brigade Combat Teams
- PHOTO: Stalker
More secrets of the Cold War continue to surface. A recent one involves an incident in 1978 when an American nuclear submarine tracked Soviet missile sub for fifty days without being detected. At any time, the U.S. sub could have destroyed the Soviet sub. Soviet spies revealed this capability in the 1980s, and the Soviet navy was shocked. They realized that if their missile subs were unable to avoid detection, or at least discover that they were being tracked, they were worthless. American defense experts had been saying publicly that American subs were far superior to their Soviet counterparts, but the Russians considered this an exaggeration. Now the Soviets knew it was not. When the Soviets began to examine what they would have to do to achieve the same standards as U.S. subs they realized they couldn't afford it. This sort of vulnerability in other areas was also revealed to the Soviets by American traitors in the 1980s and caused the same kind of consternation behind the Iron Curtain. In a perverse way, these traitors had done America a service by demoralizing the Soviet military and contributing to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.