
Nearly 70 years after USS Indianapolis tragedy, survivor tells his tale
Just past midnight July 30, 1945, two torpedoes from a Japanese submarine struck the USS Indianapolis with almost 1,200 people aboard.
Operation Christmas Drop is back in full force for first time since pandemic
A weeklong mission returns to air drop essential supplies to far flung and isolated islands of the Federated States of Micronesia and Republic of Palau.
Guam’s tourism tide is rising again following ‘complete collapse’ during pandemic
With most travel restrictions eased, the island mask mandate lifted and nearly 85% of its 170,000 population fully vaccinated, Guam is beckoning travelers.
First round of coronavirus vaccinations for US Forces Korea to start within days
Frontline health care workers and first responders will get the Moderna vaccine in the first batch of USFK coronavirus inoculations.
Service members who refused COVID-19 vaccine say they face obstacles despite policy reversal
The action doesn’t address damage to military careers or restore the faith of service members sidelined by their refusal to take the vaccine.
‘It feels good:’ Coronavirus vaccinations under way at US bases in Japan
Troops in Japan are getting the first wave of inoculations of the Moderna vaccine against the coronavirus.
Marine in Japan who refused COVID-19 vaccine is in brig facing new allegations
A Marine lance corporal in Japan who refused the COVID-19 vaccine has for a third time failed to board a U.S.-bound flight, this time to begin an administrative discharge based on new allegations, a Marine Corps spokesman said.