Green Badgers and Blue Badgers: Inside the CIA’s Secret Warfighters
In special operations, there’s a hard line between clandestine and covert missions—one’s a ghost story you tell after the blood dries, the other’s a lie you take to your grave.
In special operations, there’s a hard line between clandestine and covert missions—one’s a ghost story you tell after the blood dries, the other’s a lie you take to your grave.
In the heat of battle, as bullets whizzed by and bombs turned the night into day, Chief Coker’s voice over the radio was the calm in the storm, reminding every soul under his watch that they were not alone in this fight, forging ahead with the might of righteousness and the unwavering belief that if God is for us, then who can be against us?
I memorized every name in that binder not for duty’s sake, but because knowing the names of my brothers — like Jim McMahon — was how I claimed them as family.
Guy Cutino was the kind of soldier who turned every challenge into an opportunity to excel, and every moment into a memory worth keeping.
Meet Dr. Robert Adams. He attacked medical school at age 36 after spending years in the SEAL Teams. Seeing a physician with a Trident, the Army snatched him up and he spent the next several years taking care of DELTA operators all over the world.
Pat McNamara’s first jump was a brutal trial by fire, a stark reminder that in the world of airborne operations, survival often hinges on a razor’s edge between training and catastrophe.
Everyone in the community loved Guy Cutino. It has been more than 20 years since his passing, and he is still sorely missed.
Delta operator MSG Samuel Booth Foster is shown here on the far right during a training exercise with the SAS.
WWII firestorms, Dresden’s ghosts, and a bombastic showdown in Tokyo—history’s guilt rocks are flying, but who’s left standing?
The Internet shrank the world, but did it squeeze us too tight? From cyber overload to privacy illusions, it’s a double-edged sword.
The politically charged hold on Lt. Gen. Christopher Donahue’s promotion stalls the career of one of the Army’s most capable leaders while his role in America’s exit from Afghanistan comes under the microscope.
Delta Force was born from the relentless grit of Colonel Charlie Beckwith, who refused to let the Pentagon’s red tape stand in the way of building America’s ultimate counter-terrorism unit.