14hon MSN
Climb aboard the USS New Jersey, the fastest, longest, and most decorated US battleship ever built
The USS New Jersey, an Iowa-class battleship, served in World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Lebanon, and the Persian Gulf. It's now ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US Navy turns battleship lost at Pearl Harbor as 10,200-ton nuclear submarine
The US Navy will christen the fast-attack submarine USS Utah on Saturday, reviving a naval name last carried by a battleship ...
Battleships are large, heavily armored and armed warships, but the United States Navy stopped using them toward the end of the 20th century. Their usefulness waned as missile technology improved, and ...
The U.S. Navy did not finish construction of the USS Illinois battleship because aircraft carriers became the dominant naval combat force in WWII.
The aircraft carrier USS Gerald R Ford, billed by the US Navy as “the most capable, adaptable, and lethal combat platform in ...
US President Donald Trump said he's thinking about bringing back US Navy battleships. Battleships were heavily armored, gun-wielding ships that dominated naval fights for decades. Aircraft carriers, ...
The National Interest on MSN
The US Navy’s Final Independence-Class Littoral Combat Ship Just Set Sail
The Independence-class LCS has been re-adapted for use as a minesweeper, although there are concerns that its aluminum hull might not be ideally suited for that purpose.
Hurricane Melissa is now a potentially devastating Category 5 storm heading toward Jamaica as more U.S. military assets head ...
South Korea’s HD Hyundai Heavy Industries and U.S. shipbuilder Huntington Ingalls have partnered to jointly build Navy ...
On April 16, 1914, Daniels issued the infamous Order No. 99, ordering all U.S. Navy ships to officially become dry by July 1, 1914. (U.S. Navy) British, French, German, Spanish and Dutch navies ringed ...
The International Maritime Organization wants shipping to be emissions free by 2050. This sounds daunting to some, but the US ...
US President Donald Trump wants to “Make American Shipbuilding Great Again.” And leaders at two South Korean shipyards say that, given the chance, they could do just that.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results