Testimony is expected to wrap up in the federal trial of a soldier accused of planning to bomb a Texas restaurant filled with Fort Hood troops.
Major Jonathan Silk's unit was hit by a grenade while in Afghanistan. He didn't realize that the blast caused a heart valve to burst until he returned home
Prosecutors say Army Pfc. Naser Jason Abdo had started building the bomb when he was detained at a motel near the Texas Army post in July. Defense attorneys
Soldiers are placing more than 220,000 small U.S. flags at Arlington National Cemetery to mark the start of Memorial Day weekend activities.
Wearing a medical mask over his mouth and nose, Pfc. Naser Jason Abdo listened Tuesday as prosecutors began detailing his plot to kill Fort Hood soldiers by
Army leaders are launching a sweeping, independent review of how the service evaluates soldiers with possible post-traumatic stress disorder following recent
The nation’s top military commander was in Virginia Beach Wednesday to speak at the Joint War Fighting Conference.
President Barack Obama is awarding the Medal of Honor to a Pennsylvania Army specialist killed in combat in 1970 while serving as a rifleman in Cambodia during
About 100 homes in a Central Texas neighborhood had to be evacuated when a 6-foot inactive training missile accidentally fell from a military helicopter.
A day at school brings an emotional reunion for a 7-year-old in Wisconsin. Emma Zinkle hadn't seen her father in almost a year when he surprised her at school
Army investigators say they found no bullet wound and no foul play in the death of a soldier who died during a Skype video chat with his wife.
The self-proclaimed mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks and four accused co-conspirators will appear in public for the first time in more than three years
The Texas-based wife of an Army medic serving in Afghanistan witnessed her husband's death as the two video chatted via Skype, his family said Friday.
Bin Laden wanted al-Qaida to focus on the U.S. and not waste time and resources attacking other enemies such as Britain or trying to overthrow governments in
Letters from Osama bin Laden's last hideaway, released by U.S. officials intent on discrediting his terror organization, portray a network weak, inept and
U.S. officials say the public will soon be able to read some of Osama bin Laden's last written or typed words -- made available by the U.S. Army's Combating