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MICHAEL KIMMAGE is Professor of History at the Catholic University of America. He is the author of Collisions: The Origins of the War in Ukraine and the New Global Instability.
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The National Interest on MSNThe Trinity Test’s Legacy Is Far Bigger than a Mushroom Cloud“It was a quirk of history that at that moment the energy of the atom was engineered to kill,” Schmidt told The National Interest. “The longer legacy of that day will be much greater than ‘the bomb.’ ...
The world of vintage military equipment offers a wide variety of attractive objects for collectors to pursue, but vehicles ...
On Aug 14, 1945, the retreating Japanese forces of Unit 731 fled China. But before leaving China, Unit 731 members tried to gun down all the Chinese survivors and destroy incriminating evidence of the ...
He believes Russia’s economy and its military are strong enough to weather any additional Western measures. Read more at ...
As Russia gears up for major war games near NATO’s eastern frontier, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia are scrambling to ...
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The Nation on MSNThe Trump Administration Is Airbrushing HistoryAlso deleted were multiple pictures of the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber (named for the pilot’s mother) that dropped the first ...
Senator Ted Cruz delivered a lecture as part of the Margaret Thatcher Freedom Lecture Series at the Heritage Foundation 10 ...
Binkov's Battlegrounds on MSN12h
WWII Alternate Ending: A War Against the Soviet Union?In 1945, as World War II came to a close, tensions simmered beneath the Allied victory raising the question: could the U.S. and U.K. have turned on the Soviet Union and won? This video explores the ...
Paul Thomas Chamberlin’s book, Scorched Earth, recasts the conflict as a brutal struggle for survival among declining and ascendant imperial powers.
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The National Interest on MSN82 Years Ago, the Soviet Union Shattered the Nazi Empire at KurskThe Battle of Kursk was a catastrophic defeat for Germany; the Wehrmacht suffered around 200,000 casualties and lost nearly 700 tanks and 1,000 aircraft. These losses were irreplaceable.
Strings of radars stretching across Canada were built to give early warnings of Soviet bombers coming over the Arctic. The ...
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