National Guard, Troops
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A Department of Defense (DOD) report found that the hacking group, known as Salt Typhoon, had “extensively compromised a U.S. state’s Army National Guard network” from March 2024 through December, the June 11 memo revealed, obtained by NBC News.
Ron DeSantis’s plan —now with approval from President Donald Trump—to use his state’s National Guard JAG officers as immigration judges. Both situations insert our apolitical armed forces into polarizing domestic issues that risk politicizing the military itself.
A U.S. state's Army National Guard network was thoroughly hacked by a Chinese cyberespionage group nicknamed "Salt Typhoon," according to a Department of Homeland Security memo.
A Department of Homeland Security memo from June, describing the Pentagon’s findings, said that the group, publicly known by the nickname Salt Typhoon, “extensively compromised a U.S. state’s Army National Guard network” from March 2024 through December 2024. The memo did not specify which state was affected.
The Pentagon pulled back about half of the National Guard troops deployed to Los Angeles, arguing lawlessness from anti-ICE demonstrations subsided.
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Matthew Hahnefeld has been a valued member of the Army team for 29 years. He started out as an infantryman in 1996 at Fort Campbell,
Chinese hackers stole network diagrams, credentials, and personnel data in a breach that poses a threat to critical infrastructure nationwide.
The group has been connected to intrusions into U.S. mobile networks and the hacking of dozens of high-profile U.S. officials.
BALTIMORE — The Army National Guard’s 2025 National Best Warrior Competition officially kicked off this week in Maryland, bringing together 14 elite
Fourteen of the Army National Guard’s top soldiers and NCOs are battling it out this week in Maryland for the title of Best Warrior — and one of them is representing the Old Line State.