The United States Navy has a tradition of naming many of its popular ships after U.S. presidents. Here are five that stand ...
The U.S. military reports increased mental health distress among service members. The Navy is expanding its chaplain corps to ...
In today's technology-soaked world, it seems unfathomable that sailors aboard advance Navy ships might not have access to ...
Defense programs, particularly shipbuilding, will experience high costs and delays if the administration's tariffs target ...
See the ex-USS John F. Kennedy, the Navy's last conventionally powered aircraft carrier, which was in a class of its own.
The USS William J. Clinton (CVN-82) and USS George W. Bush (CVN-83), the 42nd and 43rd Presidents of the U.S., are the latest ...
The following is the Jan. 14, 2025, Congressional Research Service report, Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: ...
The former USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67) left Philadelphia Thursday for its final voyage. The ship will sail down to Brownsville, Texas, where it will be dismantled.
The Navy vessels will be the first to bear the names of former presidents William J. Clinton and George W. Bush.
He helped create the Gerald R. Ford Library in Ann Arbor, the presidential museum in Grand Rapids, and the Betty Ford Center near Palm Springs, California, that's both a residential treatment ...
Army major and presidential aide was in the room for key moments of Gerald Ford's presidency, including first lady Betty Ford's intervention.
The White House announced that the Navy chose to name the fifth and sixth Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carriers as USS William J. Clinton (CVN-82) and USS George W. Bush (CVN-83), after the two ...