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The German success in concentrating and using armored forces in a fast-moving offensive in the early stages of WWII astounded ...
US Tanks of WW2 Before World War II, the US Army didn't think tanks should fight other tanks. Instead, that job was assigned to the tank-destroyer class of vehicles. These vehicles were fast and ...
In his new book, "Spearhead: The World War II Odyssey of an American Tank Gunner" (published by Ballantine Books), Adam Makos (the New York Times bestselling author of "A Higher Call") chronicles ...
The M1 Abrams is perhaps one of the more famous tanks during this time, and there were many others like it produced in the Cold War era. Here is a look at the most and least mass produced U.S ...
The tanks were called the armored fist of American forces during World War II, but they were also considered a death trap, prone to fires after being struck. As a result, there were staggering losses.
An analysis of America's most popular trucks and SUVs shows they now rival the dimensions of the World War II tanks American auto makers once helped build.
In the final days of World War II, as U.S. troops advanced into Aschaffenberg, they encountered stiff German resistance in the form of something familiar: a Sherman tank, one of its beutepanzers ...
Once a World War II tank factory, it's now Richmond's Traverse Fitness, a 40,000 square-foot gym with 50-foot ceilings that's someday supposed to be at least double its current size (there's ...
Two World War II tank veterans are set to be honored Thursday on Long Island, in recognition of the 80th anniversary of the Sherman tank.
It was the manufacturing of tanks that landed Berwick a spot on Hitler's American bombing target list. Now, the town strives to keep WWII memories alive.
The M36 tank destroyer’s hull was a converted M10 hull, an earlier American tank destroyer, and was broadly reminiscent of the Sherman tank.
There were 1,100 people in the American army's top secret division, but they weren’t soldiers. They were artists, sound engineers and set designers, and their mission was deception.