Why Your Boots Are Destroying Your Feet, and How Hywell Fixes It
Your boots aren’t failing you, the environment inside them is, and once your feet start breaking down, the rest of your day follows right behind.
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Latest News stories, analysis, and updates from SOFREP.
Your boots aren’t failing you, the environment inside them is, and once your feet start breaking down, the rest of your day follows right behind.
Kissinger’s last viable chance at a controlled transition was killed not on the battlefield but in the moral theater of international politics, clearing the path for a far more violent and uncompromising outcome.
As oil chokepoints tighten and alliances strain, the unfolding standoff in the Strait of Hormuz reveals a harder truth: modern war is less about decisive battles than about who can build, sustain, and weaponize coalitions under pressure.
A retired Air Force intelligence officer challenges the official account of United Flight 93, arguing that the evidence, eyewitness testimony, and timeline discrepancies point to a far more troubling possibility, that the aircraft may have been brought down by U.S. fighters in the final minutes of 9/11.
Washington went to war in Iran and then asked its allies for help. The response was cautious and, in many cases, negative. The alliance still stands, but the margin for cooperation has narrowed—and that carries consequences.
From a wounded and possibly disfigured new ruler in Tehran to a standoff in the Strait of Hormuz testing NATO’s resolve, the war with Iran now stretches from shadowy leadership intrigue to oil-choked sea lanes guarded by ships like the destroyer USS Spruance standing watch beside the carrier USS Abraham Lincoln.
While missiles dominate the headlines overseas, the more unsettling question unfolding inside intelligence channels is whether Iran’s long-practiced playbook of proxies, deniable operatives, and patient retaliation could quietly shift the battlefield onto American soil.
Iran’s feared NOPO commandos, the black-clad guardians of the Supreme Leader, have once again emerged from the shadows, this time to shield the wounded and newly installed Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei as war, revenge vows, and internal unrest threaten to tear the regime apart.
In 1968, the Army reported 128 enemy killed and three weapons found at My Lai. Nobody asked how those numbers made sense, and that failure to ask is the same one we keep repeating every time progress is measured in destruction.
On Easter Sunday 1972, dangling beneath the Dong Ha Bridge with 500 pounds of explosives and North Vietnamese tanks massing on the far bank, Marine Captain John Ripley turned one man’s impossible task into the act that stopped an armored invasion and, decades later, finally earned him the Medal of Honor.
Drone warfare has lowered the barrier to violence. From hobbyist FPV drones to Iranian Shahed loitering munitions, the technology now raises difficult questions about how far modern conflict can reach.
Trump urges allies warships in Strait of Hormuz. Israel links synagogue attacker’s brother to Hezbollah. Zelenskyy seeks Ukraine-Russia-US talks.