Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Now we know how well the armed services did in processing the exemptions and the discharges of service members from the armed services.
The watchdog group found that military personal consistently get less than six hours of sleep each night, which could compromise safety.
Chris Cleary, the former principal cyber advisor for the Navy, left in November after three years in the role and helped establish the value of his office.
Proposed legislation would waive the requirement to get governors' approval before making changes to the structure of National Guard units.
In its nearly 250 year history the Navy has a woman as Chief of Naval Operations. Adm. Lisa Franchetti, credited an earlier CNO for advancing women in the navy.
The Coast Guard may be the most active federal agency in the aftermath of the Baltimore bridge that was knocked over by a container ship.
The Defense Department runs programs to help service members prepare. For those who risk loss of income or housing, DoD offers what it calls "warm handovers."
The Air Force released a new solicitation and plans to issue another one as part of its overall strategy to centralize many IT modernization efforts.
The Defense Department's Cyber Crime Center reached a remarkable milestone late last month. Its Vulnerability Disclosure Program processed report number 50,000.
“It's something that we have to continue to prioritize and put to the top of the list,” said Lt. Gen. Doug Shiess commander of U.S. Space Forces-Space.
DoD wants its vendors to be more cyber secure, including by expanding the pool of vendors who can take part in the no-cost cyber services it already offers.
Over the past 18 months, DoD has been working to turn a myriad OSD offices into an IT enterprise. A new agreement takes that effort a step further.
The Navy Reserve's far-flung workforce needed secure IT access anywhere, anytime. Now, the reserve's deploying the capability across the fleet.
The U.S. Transportation Command will kick off a three-year effort to make it easier for users to access data anywhere, anytime, its transformation chief says.