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The Army is canning the M10 Booker, a tank-like armored vehicle that the service chose less than two years ago as its first major new frontline combat weapon in decades.
The stage is being set and tanks are arriving for the Army's military parade to celebrate the service's 250th anniversary on Trump's birthday.
The M10 Booker was meant to be a light tank — if it was a "tank" at all — but Army officials admitted they "got the Booker wrong." Check out our latest YouTube videos. Watch here 🎥 ...
An M1A2 Abrams tank with 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division at the Joint Readiness Training Center, Fort Johnson, Louisiana. (Pfc. Luciano Alcala/US Army) Instead of traipsing ...
A truck hauling an Army tank from President Donald Trump’s sparsely attended military parade fatally struck a woman in Washington, D.C. on Monday night.. The accident occurred when an M1 Abrams ...
Army prepares tanks for DC military parade that could cost $45 million. ... D.C., on June 11 and will sleep on cots inside unused federal office buildings, including the Department of Agriculture.
The company began in 2009 by assembling and customizing tank kits, drawing the attention of hobbyists and collectors. By 2011, the brand became a full-fledged business focused exclusively on ...
D.C., Md. & Va. Army video of parade prep appeared to show ‘Hang Fauci’ graffiti. The footage, up for more than a day on the Army’s official X account, showed tanks being loaded onto a flatcar.
Tanks a lot: DC mayor fears Trump-Army parade will chew up city streets downtown The Army said it would cover the cost of any damage to Washington, D.C.'s streets from its June 14 parade.
Columns of tanks have arrived in Washington DC ahead of an enormous planned military parade to mark the US Army’s 250th anniversary, which coincides with President Trump’s birthday and Flag Day.
These tanks of the Sixth Armored Division, churning the sands of their California desert training center, are more proof that the U.S., as tankers say, “has armored equipment to burn.” Last ...
Danish tank commander Staff Sgt. Mathias Erichsen, right, tosses U.S. Sgt. 1st Class Charles Neal of the 21st Theater Sustainment Command during the final event of the U.S. Army Europe and Africa ...