Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine

This Week in History June 23rd, 2026 – June 29th, 2026

16 min · 23. kesä 2026
jakson This Week in History June 23rd, 2026 – June 29th, 2026 kansikuva

Kuvaus

This Week in U.S. Military History: June 23rd, 2026–June 29th, 2026 traces how the same week on the calendar links Monmouth’s blistering heat, Little Bighorn’s shock on the Plains, Marines digging Germans out of Belleau Wood, and American troops forcing open the port of Cherbourg. Listeners hear how the Treaty of Versailles tries to lock in peace, how the Korean War erupts almost overnight, and how a president’s words in Berlin become part of the Cold War frontline. The narrative follows each moment into its wider war or era, showing what changed for the people in uniform on the ground. From the first Soviet moves in the Berlin Blockade to the roar of transport aircraft in the airlift and the roar of jets over Hanoi’s fuel depots, the week’s stories reveal logistics, air power, and diplomacy working alongside riflemen and gunners. The episode highlights threads of leadership, adaptation, and consequence that run from eighteenth-century fields to twentieth-century treaty halls and flight lines. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads dot com, inviting listeners to walk these dates and consider how each decision still echoes in American defense today.

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

172 jaksot

jakson Beating the Panzer kansikuva

Beating the Panzer

Headline Wednesday: El Guettar, World War II in North Africa follows the day American tankers and infantry turned a Tunisian valley into a test of everything they had learned since Kasserine Pass. From the ridges around El Guettar to the mine belts and gun pits in the valley floor, this episode looks at how American crews faced seasoned German panzer units under the North African sun. We trace the fear and determination in the ranks as German armor rolled forward, the careful siting of artillery and tank destroyers, and the moment when the line either had to hold or give way. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads dot com. In this episode, you will hear how a raw army absorbed a painful defeat, rebuilt its defenses, and then met a full-scale armored assault with minefields, registered artillery, and better combined-arms tactics. We walk through the lead-up from Kasserine to El Guettar, the armored thrust into the valley, the turning of the battle as German tanks ran into layered fire, and the aftermath that reshaped Allied confidence in American armor. It is a tight, ground-level story that works as a refresher for your own reading, a companion to campaign studies, or a springboard for staff ride planning and classroom discussion.

8. heinä 202615 min
jakson This Week in History July 7th, 2026 – July 13th, 2026 kansikuva

This Week in History July 7th, 2026 – July 13th, 2026

This Week in U.S. Military History: July 7th, 2026–July 13th, 2026 follows a seven-day span where revolution, civil war, empire, and Cold War all intersect through shared calendar dates. Listeners hear Continental soldiers in New York reacting to the words of independence, New Yorkers rioting over the first federal draft, and Union troops fighting a delaying action at Monocacy while a president later comes under fire at Fort Stevens. The story then shifts to the seizure of Monterey, the annexation of Hawaii, the stormy landings on Sicily’s beaches, a massive banzai charge on Saipan, and the naming of Douglas MacArthur to lead United Nations forces in Korea. This Week in U.S. Military History is presented as a narrative walk through these turning points, showing how each moment fits into its wider war and how geography, politics, and human choices tie them together. The series is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads dot com, inviting listeners to trace themes of leadership, risk, and adaptation across very different conflicts. Along the way, the episode keeps the focus on the people who marched, sailed, fought, and decided, connecting their experiences to the long arc of American arms and strategy.

Eilen12 min
jakson Torpedoes Away kansikuva

Torpedoes Away

Headline Wednesday: Submarine War in the Pacific, World War II takes you beneath the gray swells and into the steel hulls where a small community of United States submariners waged a quiet, ruthless campaign against Japan’s lifelines. This episode follows the men who hunted tankers and freighters in the dark, threading minefields and depth-charge patterns to cut the flow of fuel, ore, and food that kept an island empire fighting. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads dot com, bringing undersea ambushes, convoy battles, and high-risk patrols into clear, human focus. Across the episode, you will hear how a peacetime scouting force turned into a lethal commerce raider arm through bitter torpedo failures, stubborn testing, and new technology like radar and codebreaking. We trace the learning curve from cautious early patrols to aggressive wolfpack tactics, then follow the consequences as Japanese shipping lanes empty, factories slow, and frontline garrisons starve. It is a journey from periscope crosshairs on a single freighter to the larger collapse of an overextended empire at sea. Use this story as a refresher for your own reading, wargaming, or staff-ride prep, and pair it with the Dispatch Audio Editions at dispatch.trackpads.com or your regular podcast app.

1. heinä 202613 min