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National Security Journal on MSN15h
The U.S. Navy’s Iowa-Class Battleship Is a ‘Dead’ PlatformWhile their legacy endures, the Iowa-class represents a bygone era of warfare, ill-suited for today’s high-tech, unmanned, ...
Despite the largest loss of life sustained by one family in the U.S. Navy's history, Alleta and Thomas were determined to ...
The new policy aims to revitalize a U.S. shipbuilding industry that has fallen well behind production levels of its rivals ...
National Security Journal on MSN3d
Iowa-Class: The Best U.S. Navy Battleships Ever Made Comeback after ComebackThe Iowa-class battleships were the pinnacle of American naval engineering and firepower. Conceived in the late 1930s and built during World War II, these ships were designed to be the fastest and ...
Newly minted Navy Secretary John Phelan pledged a shakeup of the Department of the Navy with a focus on growing shipbuilding ...
Flanked by Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, Iowa Republican Mariannettee Miller-Meeks witnessed the first submarine to be named after the state on April 5. Miller-Meeks witnessed this historic event at the ...
The 377-foot vessel can dive to depths of more than 800 feet below the surface and maneuver at speeds of over 25 knots.
None of the Iowa-class battleships will ever return to service, the latest U.S. Navy vessel named after the state was ...
The new USS Iowa sub, SSN 797, was commissioned Saturday morning during a special ceremony at Submarine Base New London in ...
Another USS Iowa has joined the U.S. Navy’s fleet. The nuclear-powered submarine is the fourth Navy vessel to bear the USS ...
The new Navy submarine, a nuclear-powered Virginia-class vessel, is the first submarine to be named for the state.
USS Iowa (SSN-797), the 24th submarine of the Virginia-class, was commissioned at Naval Submarine Base New London in Groton, ...
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