Army, Donald Trump and 250th anniversary
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As the Army celebrates its 250th birthday, officials say the military’s apolitical nature is at risk
As the US Army prepares for its 250th birthday celebration with a major parade of military hardware in Washington, DC, which just happens to coincide with President Donald’s Trumps birthday, former officials are growing increasingly concerned about how the military is being pulled into the political arena by the Trump administration,
U.S. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll told "FOX and Friends" on Wednesday morning that the U.S. has astronauts currently "on the Moon." Answering a question about the parade scheduled for Saturday to mark the 250th anniversary of the U.
Newsom on Trump's military parade: "It's a vulgar display. It's the kind of thing you see with Kim Jong Un, you see it with Putin, you see it with dictators around the world that are weak … Weakness masquerading as strength … that's about as small as it gets … that's Donald… pic.twitter.com/3hXuRHPKUU
President Donald Trump on Saturday is set to host a major military parade in Washington, celebrating the Army’s 250th anniversary and Flag Day.
As President Donald Trump viciously attacked his perceived political foes, he whipped up boos from the gathered troops directed at California leaders, including Gov. Gavin Newsom.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and others have highlighted the “Trump bump” in recruiting wins. Officials and experts say it’s a bit more complicated.
Seven Army bases whose names were changed in 2023 because they honored Confederate leaders are all reverting back to their original names.
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The Quaker House is one of several groups that operates the GI Rights Hotline (877-447-4487). The hotline has become extra hot since President Trump sent the National Guard and then the Marines into Los Angeles in response to protests over federal immigration raids.
Trump spoke for more than 50 minutes June 10 on Fort Bragg’s Pike Field. From Army history to the LA protests, here's what he talked about.
President Donald Trump said 7 Army bases will revert to names that honored Confederates, now honoring other soldiers of the same names.