
Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine
74 episodes — Page 1 of 2
This Week in History May 12th, 2026 – May 18th, 2026
This Week in History May 5th, 2026 – May 11th, 2026
This Week in History April 28th, 2026 – May 4th, 2026
This Week in History April 21st, 2026 – April 27th, 2026
This Week in History April 14th, 2026 – April 20th, 2026
This Week in History April 7th, 2026 – April 13th, 2026

Ep 91Beyond the Call: Colonel John Riley Kane at Ploesti, 1943
Beyond the Call: Colonel John Riley Kane at Ploesti, 1943 follows a United States Army air group commander through one of World War II’s most dangerous low-level bombing raids, as he leads damaged B-24 Liberators into the firestorm over Romania’s vital oil refineries. Listeners hear the story of Kane’s early life in Texas, the long flight from North Africa, the chaos of Operation Tidal Wave, and the split-second decisions that defined his command under relentless antiaircraft fire. The episode also reflects on the strategic importance of Ploesti, the cost paid by his crews, and the character traits that shaped his courage and responsibility. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads dot com.
Ep 88Four Carriers in Flames: How the U.S. Turned the Tide at Midway
Headline Wednesday: Battle of Midway, World War II follows the carrier ambush that shattered Japan’s early momentum in the central Pacific. From the coral runways of Midway Atoll to the crowded flight decks of Enterprise, Hornet, and Yorktown, this episode traces how codebreakers, repair crews, and aircrews all fed into one decisive day. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com, bringing listeners back into the noise, confusion, and split-second choices that put four Japanese carriers in flames and shifted the balance of the war at sea.Across the episode, you’ll move from the quiet dawn east of Midway to the desperate torpedo runs, the dive-bomber attacks from out of the sun, and the fragile hours when Yorktown fought for her life. The narrative walks through the intelligence puzzle, the scattered American strikes, the turning attacks on Akagi, Kaga, Soryu, and Hiryu, and the long shadow Midway cast over later campaigns from Guadalcanal onward. It is a clear, tactical story that still works as a refresher for personal study, graduate reading, or staff-ride preparation, showing how timing, training, and courage turned one atoll into a hinge of global history.

Ep 87This Week in History March 24th, 2026 – March 30th, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: March 24th, 2026–March 30th, 2026 follows a seven-day arc that runs from colonial anger over the Quartering Act and the birth of a permanent frigate navy through the siege of Veracruz, last-ditch Confederate attacks at Fort Stedman, and the hard-won declaration that Iwo Jima was finally secure. Listeners hear how a lost experimental submarine near Hawaii drove safer undersea design, how a small surface action at the Komandorski Islands cut off remote Japanese garrisons, and how the Easter Offensive and the final withdrawal of combat troops reshaped American memory of Vietnam before aircrews head into the skies over Kosovo in Operation Allied Force.The narration moves across centuries in present-tense detail, showing how decisions about housing soldiers, buying Alaska, honoring Andrews’ Raiders with the first Medals of Honor, and relying on coalition airpower all shaped the evolving character of American arms. Along the way, the episode threads together leadership, adaptation, and sacrifice across cold ridges, volcanic rock, and crowded flight decks, inviting listeners to connect past campaigns with the burdens still carried by veterans and families today. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

Ep 86Beyond the Call: Second Lieutenant Walter Edward Truemper over Leipzig, 1944
Beyond the Call: Second Lieutenant Walter Edward Truemper over Leipzig, 1944 follows the story of a young American navigator whose damaged B-17 limps home from a deadly World War Two mission, only for him to refuse an order to bail out and instead stay with his gravely wounded pilot in a final attempt to land the crippled bomber. Listeners hear a detailed narrative of the mission, the air war over Germany, and the tense minutes above England when duty, loyalty, and survival collided. The episode places Truemper’s actions in the wider context of the bomber campaign and reflects on what his courage and quiet leadership say about responsibility and comradeship in war. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and this podcast is developed by Trackpads dot com.
Ep 85Arsenal: AH-1 Cobra over Vietnam, 1967–1973
Arsenal: AH-1 Cobra in Vietnam, 1967–1973 follows the first dedicated United States attack helicopter from hot landing zones in the Central Highlands to hunter killer missions along the Laotian border in the Vietnam War, showing how this slim gunship reshaped air assault and close support. Listeners hear the Cobra in action over contested valleys, the tactical and strategic problems it was built to solve, the story of its rapid design and production, what it was like to crew and maintain it, and how its combat record led to later anti armor variants and export versions. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and this podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 83“Underway on Nuclear Power”: USS Nautilus and the Birth of the Nuclear Navy
Headline Wednesday: USS Nautilus and the Birth of the Nuclear Navy, early Cold War. In this episode, we follow the gray hull that slipped away from Groton and quietly rewrote the rules beneath the waves. From the first “Underway on nuclear power” message to long submerged runs and Arctic operations, Nautilus turns a technical experiment into a working combat submarine. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com.You’ll hear how nuclear propulsion moved from lab concept to reactor compartment, how Rickover’s demanding culture shaped a new kind of crew, and how voyages under the polar ice changed Cold War planning. We walk through the lead-up, the proving cruises, the strategic turning point, and the legacy that every modern SSN still carries. It is a clear, narrative pass that works as a primer, a refresher for deeper reading, or a starting point for a staff ride or museum visit built around Nautilus and the nuclear navy.

Ep 82This Week in History March 17th, 2026 – March 23rd, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: March 17th, 2026–March 23rd, 2026 brings together moments when words, weapons, and technology steered the United States armed forces onto new paths. Listeners move from Patrick Henry’s fiery “liberty or death” plea and the British evacuation of Boston, through the desperate stand at Bentonville, MacArthur’s “I shall return” vow, and the inferno aboard the carrier Franklin off Japan. Along the way, the crossing of the Rhine at Oppenheim and the airborne drop of Operation Tomahawk show how ground and air forces reshaped campaigns at the war’s sharpest edge.The story then widens into orbit and deep into the Cold War and beyond, with the Vanguard 1 satellite, the secret bombing of Cambodia under Operation Menu, an ambitious vision for missile defense, and the opening strikes of the Iraq War. Across these seven days, listeners hear how leadership, risk, and innovation link colonial assemblies, riverbanks, carrier decks, and desert highways. This Week in U.S. Military History is a Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads dot com, offering a weekly walk through the dates that continue to shape American arms and service.

Ep 81Beyond the Call: Major William Arthur Shomo over Luzon, 1945
Beyond the Call: Major William Arthur Shomo at Luzon, 1945 follows a United States Army Air Forces reconnaissance pilot who turned a routine photo mission into one of the most remarkable aerial combats of World War Two in the Pacific. Listeners hear how a quiet former mortician from Pennsylvania led a two-plane flight against a thirteen-ship enemy formation, destroyed seven aircraft himself, and protected the forces landing on Luzon. The episode weaves the story of his life, the unfolding campaign in the Philippines, and the leadership and character that shaped his impossible decision under fire. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 80Arsenal: UH-1 Huey and Its Variants in Air Assault over Vietnam, Vietnam War
Arsenal: UH-1 Huey and Its Variants in Air Assault over Vietnam, Vietnam War follows the iconic turbine helicopter from the dust and fire of Ia Drang landing zones to its long service as a medevac, gunship, and troop carrier across the wider Vietnam theater. Listeners hear how the Huey solved the problem of moving infantry and casualties in brutal terrain, how its design and crew layout shaped life on board, and how its strengths and weaknesses played out in hot landing zones under fire. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and this podcast episode is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 78Raid on Son Tay: Special Forces, Air Power, and a Mission With No Prisoners
Headline Wednesday: Raid on Son Tay, Vietnam War takes listeners into the low-level night flight toward a North Vietnamese prisoner of war camp just west of Hanoi, where American Special Forces and Air Force crews risked everything to bring captured airmen home. This episode walks through the joint rescue force that crashed a helicopter into the courtyard, cleared the guard towers, and swept the cellblocks, only to find an empty camp and abandoned bunks. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads dot com to spotlight single days and single decisions that still echo through United States military history. In this story-driven episode, you will follow the Son Tay mission from sketchy reconnaissance photos and secret rehearsals in the States, through the low-level penetration into heavily defended airspace, to the moment the raiders realized there were no prisoners to move. We break down the flawless execution and the painful intelligence miss, then trace how the raid changed North Vietnamese handling of POWs, lifted morale inside Hanoi’s prisons, and helped shape modern joint special operations. Use this episode as a focused refresher for your own reading, study, or staff ride preparation on the Vietnam War and the evolution of high-risk hostage rescue missions.

Ep 77This Week in History March 10th, 2026 – March 16th, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: March 10th, 2026–March 16th, 2026 follows a week where questions of loyalty, power, and responsibility sit at the heart of the story. Listeners move from George Washington calming angry officers at Newburgh and the founding of the United States Military Academy at West Point to Ulysses Grant taking charge of all Union armies and United Nations forces recapturing Seoul in the Korean War. Along the way, the narrative tracks Pershing’s expedition into Mexico, MacArthur’s escape from Corregidor, and the creation of the Army’s K-9 Corps.The episode also confronts the extremes of modern conflict, from the firebombing of Tokyo and the announcement of the Truman Doctrine to the tragedy of My Lai and its impact on military ethics and public trust. Each stop on the calendar shows how decisions made in cramped meeting rooms, desert columns, bomb bays, and small villages shaped both American strategy and the standards expected of those who serve. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

Ep 76Beyond the Call: George Benjamin Jr
Beyond the Call: Private First Class George Benjamin Jr. at Leyte, 1944 follows a young radio operator of the United States Army as he rises under fire, rallies a stalled attack, rescues a trapped tank crew, and ultimately gives his life trying to shield his comrades from a deadly explosion in the Philippines campaign of World War II. Listeners hear the story of the Leyte fighting, the terrain and tactics that shaped his final day, and a clear explanation of what his Medal of Honor citation meant on the ground. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and this podcast is developed by Trackpads dot com.
Ep 73Secrets at Sixty Thousand Feet: The U-2 Program and the Day Powers Was Shot Down
Headline Wednesday: U-2 Shootdown over Sverdlovsk, Cold War. A lone spy plane cruising at 60,000 feet over the Soviet Union suddenly becomes the center of a global crisis when Francis Gary Powers’ U-2 is torn apart by a surface-to-air missile near Sverdlovsk. This episode traces the mission from the quiet, high-altitude world of the cockpit to the moment Powers falls under a parachute into hostile fields, and the Soviets realize they have captured both the aircraft and its pilot. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com to bring pivotal moments in US military history to life.

Ep 72This Week in History March 3rd, 2026 – March 9th, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: March 3rd, 2026–March 9th, 2026 traces a week when American forces leapt from island forts and border towns to Rhine bridges and Vietnamese beaches. Listeners follow Continental Marines raiding New Providence for desperately needed powder, volunteers falling at the Alamo, and soldiers storming ashore at Veracruz as the United States learns how to project power from sea to shore. The story then moves through Pea Ridge, Hampton Roads, the Enrollment Act, Pancho Villa’s raid, the seizure of the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen, the firebombing of Tokyo, and the Marine landing at Da Nang, tying each moment to its wider war and to the people who carried it out.Along the way, the episode highlights how new technology, national mobilization, and hard choices at the border and overseas shaped the modern American military, from ironclads and conscription to strategic bombing and large-scale intervention in Southeast Asia. Listeners hear a clear narrative walk through the week’s anniversaries and the threads that connect them: leadership under pressure, adaptation in the face of change, and the enduring weight of sacrifice on front-line troops and civilians alike. “This Week in U.S. Military History” is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

Ep 71Beyond the Call: Technical Sergeant Beauford T. Anderson at Kakazu Ridge, Okinawa, 1945
Beyond the Call: Technical Sergeant Beauford T. Anderson at Kakazu Ridge, Okinawa, 1945 tells the story of a weapons platoon leader who faced an overwhelming predawn counterattack on Okinawa and chose to stand alone on a threatened flank to protect his men in the closing months of World War Two. Listeners hear how the fight for Kakazu Ridge fit into the brutal Pacific campaign, how Anderson improvised with mortar rounds used as hand-thrown explosives, and how his actions preserved a fragile foothold on the ridge. The episode reflects on courage, responsibility, and improvisation under fire, and shows what leadership looks like when lives hang in the balance. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and this podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 70Arsenal EA-6B Prowler and EA-18G Growler in Carrier-Based Electronic Warfare
Arsenal: EA-6B Prowler and EA-18G Growler in Carrier-Based Electronic Warfare, Vietnam to the 21st Century follows the Navy and Marine Corps electronic attack lineage from the skies over North Vietnam to Desert Storm, Libya, and today’s contested airspace. Listeners hear how these aircraft fought enemy radars and missiles in action, the problem they were built to solve, how designers turned an attack bomber and a strike fighter into jamming platforms, and what life was like for the pilots, electronic warfare officers, and maintainers who kept them flying. The episode traces their combat record, variants, and lasting legacy. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 68From a Carrier Deck to Tokyo: How the Doolittle Raiders Took the War to Japan
Headline Wednesday: Doolittle Raid, Second World War (Pacific Theater) traces the first American air strike on Japan’s home islands, from a crowded carrier deck in the western Pacific to the smoke drifting over Tokyo. This episode follows James Doolittle and his volunteer crews as they train B-25 medium bombers for a mission no manual had ever imagined, then ride Hornet and her escorts into waters thick with Japanese patrols. You will hear how an early contact with picket boats forces a risky long-range launch, how each bomber threads its way toward Tokyo and other cities, and how the raid’s physical damage pales beside its shock value. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

Ep 67This Week in History February 24th, 2026 – March 2nd, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: February 24th, 2026–March 2nd, 2026 brings you from George Rogers Clark slogging through flooded frontier country at Vincennes to high-altitude firefights in Afghanistan’s Shah-i-Kot Valley. Along the way, you hear how a peacetime gunnery demonstration aboard USS Princeton turned to tragedy, how panic and flak filled the night sky over Los Angeles in early 1942, and how Allied aircrews in the Southwest Pacific learned to tear apart Japanese convoys in the Battle of the Bismarck Sea.Across the hour, the story moves through Castle Bravo’s enormous nuclear blast at Bikini Atoll, the long grind of Operation Rolling Thunder over North Vietnam, the sweeping “left hook” of Desert Storm’s ground offensive, and the hard lessons of Operation Anaconda. You hear how each moment fits into its wider war, and how themes of adaptation, miscalculation, and endurance echo across generations. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

Ep 66Beyond the Call: Staff Sergeant George John Hall at Anzio, 1944
Beyond the Call: Staff Sergeant George John Hall at Anzio, 1944 follows a young infantry leader from Stoneham, Massachusetts into the brutal Italian campaign of World War II, where his one-man assault on multiple German machine-gun positions turns a stalled attack into a fighting chance for his company. Listeners hear the story of the Anzio beachhead, the exposed farmland his unit had to cross, and the split-second decisions that cost Hall his leg but saved countless lives. The narrative reflects on courage, responsibility, and small-unit leadership under fire. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and this podcast episode is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 65Arsenal: Oliver Hazard Perry–Class Frigates in NATO Sea Lanes, the Late Cold War
Arsenal: Oliver Hazard Perry–Class Frigates in NATO Sea Lanes, the Late Cold War follows the lean guided missile escorts that guarded convoys in the North Atlantic, faced missiles and mines in the Persian Gulf, and rode into Operation Desert Storm beside carriers and battleships. Listeners hear how Cold War arithmetic drove the need for an affordable general purpose frigate, how gas turbines, a single missile rail, and an embarked helicopter shaped the design, and how crews actually lived and fought inside these tight steel towns at sea. The episode traces their combat record, export variants, and long shadow on later frigate programs, with Arsenal as the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 63Into the City: Marines, Soldiers, and the Second Battle of Fallujah
Headline Wednesday: The Second Battle of Fallujah, Iraq War takes listeners back into the most intense urban fighting of the early 2000s, as Marines, soldiers, Iraqi units, and insurgent fighters clash street by street for control of a city that has become the symbol and engine of a wider insurgency. From the eerie November night when assault columns form up on the edge of Fallujah to the first breaches through berms and walls, the story walks through the sights, sounds, and decisions that defined the return to a city many had already fought in once before. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com.Across this episode, the narrative follows the lead up from the first battle and its uneasy end, into the planning for a full scale return, and then into the brutal, block by block fight that follows. Listeners hear how isolation, shaping fires, and small unit adaptation slowly turn the battle, even as the cost in shattered streets and human lives climbs higher with each day of contact. The episode closes by tracing the aftermath, including the short term disruption of a major stronghold and the longer term reality that a single hard won victory could not settle the war’s ultimate outcome. It is a detailed, human focused look at Fallujah that works as both a refresher for study and a way to think through the realities of modern urban combat.
Ep 62This Week in History February 17th, 2026 – February 23rd, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: February 17th, 2026–February 23rd, 2026 traces a sweeping arc from nineteenth-century borderlands to the deserts of the Persian Gulf. Listeners move from the Adams–Onís Treaty that brought Florida into the United States orbit, through desperate stands at the Alamo and Buena Vista, to the fall of Columbia and Wilmington as the Civil War’s grip tightens. The story then shifts to the Pacific, where carrier raids smash Truk Lagoon and Marines fight their way onto Iwo Jima and raise the flag on Mount Suribachi.Across the same seven days, the episode steps back to the home front as Executive Order 9066 reshapes lives under wartime suspicion, then looks upward as Marine aviator John Glenn orbits the Earth and outward as coalition armored columns surge across Kuwait and Iraq in Desert Storm. Throughout, listeners hear how leadership, technology, geography, and hard moral choices intersect in a single week on the calendar. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

Ep 61Beyond the Call: Brigadier General Frederick Walker Castle at the Christmas Eve Air Raids over Germany, 1944
Beyond the Call: Brigadier General Frederick Walker Castle at the Christmas Eve Air Raids over Germany, 1944 traces the final mission of an American bomber commander during World War Two, from the frozen skies above the Ardennes to a burning Fortress falling over Belgium. Listeners hear the story of a massive bomber formation sent to shield troops in the Battle of the Bulge, the engine failure that left Castle’s aircraft exposed, and his decision to hold the bombs and stay at the controls so his crew could escape. The episode weaves combat narrative with reflections on duty, restraint, and selfless leadership. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 60Arsenal: M109 Self-Propelled Howitzer in Desert Storm, 1991
Arsenal: M109 Self-Propelled Howitzer in Desert Storm, 1991 follows tracked artillery batteries across the deserts of Kuwait and Iraq in the Persian Gulf War, showing how they moved, fired, and survived alongside armored divisions. Listeners hear the M109 in action on the gun line, the problem it was built to solve for fast moving Cold War armies, the story of its design and evolution into variants like Paladin, and the daily realities of crews living inside a steel box that bucks under recoil. The episode traces its baptism of fire, strengths and weaknesses in combat, and the legacy that lives on in museums, memorials, and modern artillery doctrine. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 58Black Hawk Down: How Rangers and Delta Held On in the Streets of Mogadishu
Headline Wednesday: Black Hawk Down, Somalia 1993 follows the October raid over Mogadishu’s Bakara Market, where a quick snatch mission turned into a long urban survival fight around two fallen Black Hawks. From Rangers sprinting to blocking positions to Delta operators pushing through walled compounds, the episode traces how a raid built on speed and surprise collided with dense streets, rising militia fire, and helicopters shot from the sky. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.Across the episode, you hear the full arc of the fight: the humanitarian mission that hardened into a manhunt, the convoys lost in alleyways, the crash-site perimeters that refused to fall, and the armored relief column that finally broke through. We follow small-unit choices under fire and the strategic shock that followed in Washington, showing how one day in Mogadishu reshaped thinking about urban combat and peace enforcement. Use this episode as a focused refresher for your own reading, study, or staff-ride preparation, and pair it with the Dispatch Audio Editions at dispatch.trackpads.com for more battles told this way.

Ep 57This Week in History February 10th, 2026 – February 16th, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: February 10th, 2026–February 16th, 2026 follows a single winter week on the calendar from Tripoli Harbor to Havana, Dresden, Corregidor, and the halls of Congress. Listeners move from Stephen Decatur’s night raid to destroy the captured frigate Philadelphia and the bitter Civil War struggle for Fort Donelson to the sudden loss of USS Maine in Havana Harbor and the charged road to the Spanish-American War. Along the way, Abraham Lincoln’s birthday on the frontier frames what it means for a civilian president to learn the hard trade of command.The story then shifts into the global crises of the twentieth century, with the Yalta conference shaping Allied victory and the postwar map, bombers turning Dresden into a symbol of strategic bombing’s terrible power, and paratroopers and amphibious forces fighting to recapture Corregidor in Manila Bay. The week closes with the Twenty-fifth Amendment, where quiet constitutional language secures continuity of command in the nuclear age. Together, the narrative shows how a single run of February dates can hold daring raids, fiery debates, heavy losses, and careful safeguards for those who carry the burden of national defense.

Ep 56Beyond the Call: Private First Class Dirk John Cornelius Vlug at Limon, Leyte, 1944
Beyond the Call: Private First Class Dirk John Cornelius Vlug at Limon, Leyte, 1944 follows an infantryman in World War II who steps alone onto a narrow Philippine road to confront an oncoming column of enemy tanks, turning a likely breakthrough into a line of burning wrecks. This episode presents a vivid narrative of the action, sets it within the brutal Ormoc corridor fighting on Leyte, and reflects on how Vlug’s initiative, sense of responsibility, and calm under fire shaped the outcome for his battalion. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 55Arsenal: Ohio-class SSBNs in the Sea-Based Nuclear Triad, Cold War and Beyond
Arsenal: Ohio-class SSBNs in the Sea-Based Nuclear Triad, Cold War and Beyond follows the silent patrols of United States ballistic missile submarines in Cold War oceans and later post Cold War deterrent patrols, where deep water and endless nights replace traditional battlefields. Listeners hear the Ohio class in action on North Atlantic and Pacific patrols, the strategic problem that drove its creation, how designers built a huge yet quiet hull around Trident missiles, and what daily life feels like for Blue and Gold crews on months long missions. The episode traces their deterrent record, the shift to guided missile roles, and their legacy as Columbia class boats arrive. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 53Abrams vs T-72: The Desert Tank Duels That Shocked the World
Headline Wednesday: Abrams vs T-72 in Desert Storm, Gulf War follows the M1 Abrams’ combat debut as it drives into the blacked-out Kuwaiti desert and meets Soviet-designed armor for the first time. This episode takes you from the tank commander’s view through thermal sights to the wider campaign plan that depended on American armor punching through Iraqi lines and shattering Republican Guard formations. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com to bring pivotal moments of United States military history to life in clear, concrete detail.Across the episode, you follow the full arc of the fight: how the Abrams was built and trained for a Cold War battlefield, how it adapted to sand, heat, and burning oil, and how its crews met T-72s dug in across the desert. You hear the sequence of desert duels, the turning power of thermal sights and disciplined gunnery, and the combined arms web that made Iraqi counterattacks so costly. The story closes with the aftermath and lessons, offering listeners a crisp refresher they can use for personal study, classroom work, or staff ride preparation wherever modern armored warfare is discussed.

Ep 52This Week in History February 3rd, 2026 – February 9th, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: February 3rd, 2026–February 9th, 2026 follows a week where alliances are signed, rivers and islands are seized, and entire theaters of war turn on hard choices and harder fighting. Listeners move from the Treaty of Alliance with France and the Union capture of Fort Henry to the amphibious assault on Roanoke Island and the founding of the USO, then into the icy North Atlantic with the Dorchester and the jungle and surf of Guadalcanal and Manila.This narrative episode also traces decisions made far from the front lines, from the Yalta Conference to the creation of United States Africa Command, and sets them alongside the street fighting in Hue and the attack on Pleiku to show how policy, logistics, and human courage intertwine. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com, offering a guided walk through the week’s battles, turning points, and acts of service and how they fit into the larger story of American arms.

Ep 51Beyond the Call: Private First Class Thomas Eugene “Gene” Atkins at the Villa Verde Trail, Luzon, 1945
Beyond the Call: Private First Class Thomas Eugene Atkins at the Villa Verde Trail, Luzon, 1945 follows a lone infantryman holding a shattered ridge against repeated night assaults during the Pacific war, blending front-line tension with the human story of Gene from Campobello, South Carolina. Listeners hear how his quiet leadership, endurance under fire, and refusal to abandon his post shaped the battle and protected his company. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com, bringing Medal of Honor stories to life in vivid, accessible detail.
Ep 50Arsenal: B-2 Spirit in Stealth Global Strike, The Post–Cold War Era
Arsenal: B-2 Spirit in Stealth Global Strike, Post-Cold War Era follows the flying wing from dark Atlantic crossings to precision strikes over Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Iraq, showing how a bomber built for nuclear deterrence became a global conventional scalpel. Listeners hear the Spirit in action over heavily defended airspace, the problem it was designed to solve against dense radar and missile networks, and the design choices that led back to the flying wing. The episode walks through cockpit life on thirty hour missions, crew workflow, and what maintainers face keeping stealth ready for combat. It closes with the B-2’s combat record, evolving upgrades, and long shadow over future bombers. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads dot com.
Ep 48Opening Shock: How Stealth and Precision Air Strikes Crippled Iraqi Command
Headline Wednesday: Opening Night of Desert Storm, Gulf War follows the first hours of the air campaign as coalition aircraft slip into the skies over Baghdad to shatter Iraq’s command system. This episode traces how stealth fighters, cruise missiles, and electronic warfare converged on leadership bunkers, radar sites, and power grids, turning a heavily defended capital into a stunned, half-blind center of gravity. You’ll hear how pilots, radar operators, and commanders experienced those hours from very different vantage points, and why that sudden shock still shapes how we think about air power today. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com.From the long build-up of Desert Shield to the moment F-117s cross into Iraqi airspace, the episode walks through the planning, rehearsal, and hard choices behind the opening blow. We follow the first helicopters going after early-warning radars, cruise missiles threading through valleys, stealth fighters diving toward downtown Baghdad, and conventional strike packages riding the gaps they opened. The story then tracks the break in Iraq’s network, the muted response from its air force, and how those shocks set conditions for the later ground offensive. Use this episode as a clear, single-sit rep of the air campaign’s first night, whether you are brushing up for your own reading, a unit discussion, or a staff ride.

Ep 47This Week in History January 27th, 2026 – February 2nd, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: January 27th, 2026–February 2nd, 2026 brings together frontier violence, treaty tables, island landings, and the birth of new institutions. Listeners follow a narrative arc from the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the vast expansion of American territory to the winter tragedy of the Bear River Massacre and the creation of the United States Coast Guard and the Army Nurse Corps. Each story is told in clear, human terms, showing how soldiers, sailors, aircrews, and families experienced these turning points and how they fit into the larger wars and eras around them.Along the way, the episode traces early carrier raids in the Pacific, the struggle for Kwajalein, and the shock of the Tet Offensive and the Paris Peace Accords, where battlefield outcomes and public opinion collided. The focus stays on what it sounds and feels like to walk through the week’s events, hearing how decisions in Washington reach all the way to remote outposts and crowded city streets. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com, inviting listeners to connect past campaigns and hard-won reforms to the service and sacrifice of today.

Ep 46Beyond the Call: Private First Class Albert Ernest Schwab at Okinawa Shima, 1945
Beyond the Call: Private First Class Albert Ernest Schwab at Okinawa Shima, 1945 follows a young Marine flamethrower operator whose solitary assaults on two machine gun nests turn a doomed valley into a narrow, hard-won foothold in the Pacific war. Listeners hear the story of his journey from Tulsa oil fields to the First Marine Division, the desperate fight for a ridgeline on Okinawa, and the split-second decisions that cost him his life but saved his company. The narrative highlights the meaning behind his Medal of Honor citation, explores leadership and character under extreme fire, and reflects on how his legacy endures. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and this podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 45Arsenal: F-15 Eagle in the Air Superiority Role, Cold War to Desert Storm
Arsenal: F-15 Eagle in the Air Superiority Role, Cold War to Desert Storm follows the Eagle from early battles over Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley to sweeping Iraqi fighters from the sky in Operation Desert Storm, showing how a purpose built air dominance fighter reshaped modern air combat. Listeners hear the Eagle in action at night over the desert, the painful Vietnam era lessons that drove its design, and the way pilots, maintainers, and controllers worked together to turn thrust, radar, and missiles into real control of the air. The episode traces its combat record, key variants, and lasting influence on later stealth fighters and doctrine. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 43House to House in Hue: Marines, Soldiers, and the Battle for a Citadel
Headline Wednesday: Battle for Hue City, Vietnam War follows Marines, soldiers, and South Vietnamese forces as they fight block by block for a historic imperial capital. This episode walks you into rain-soaked streets along the Perfume River, past shattered shopfronts and into the shadow of the Citadel, where North Vietnamese and Viet Cong units turned temples, houses, and courtyards into strongpoints. You’ll hear how a quiet garrison town became a city under siege and why retaking Hue mattered far beyond I Corps. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.From the first confused radio calls and refugee warnings to the final push through ruined neighborhoods and ancient walls, the episode traces the full arc of the battle. We follow small-unit leaders learning urban tactics the hard way, armor and Ontos vehicles blasting open strongpoints, and South Vietnamese troops grinding forward inside the Citadel. The turning points, the terrible civilian cost, and the wider impact on the Tet Offensive and public opinion all come into focus. Use this episode as a vivid refresher for your own reading, study, or staff-ride prep whenever urban combat and the lessons of 1968 are on the table.

Ep 42This Week in History January 20th, 2026 – January 26th, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: January 20th, 2026–January 26th, 2026 traces a remarkable arc from a Revolutionary War mutiny in frozen New Jersey camps to nuclear alert bombers scattering their dangerous cargo over North Carolina. Along the way, you move from Joseph Hooker’s takeover of the battered Army of the Potomac and the quiet arrival of USS Maine in Havana harbor to the first American ground troops stepping onto European soil in Northern Ireland and the hard, costly gamble of Operation Shingle at Anzio.Listeners follow a continuous narrative that links the end of the Battle of the Bulge, Audie Murphy’s stand near Holtzwihr, and the launch of USS Nautilus with the siege of Khe Sanh and the seizure of USS Pueblo, showing how leadership, technology, and human endurance collide under pressure. “This Week in U.S. Military History” is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com, offering a weekly walk through seven days that reshaped American arms and service.

Ep 41Beyond the Call: Platoon Sergeant Joseph R. Julian at Iwo Jima, 1945
Beyond the Call: Platoon Sergeant Joseph R. Julian at Iwo Jima, 1945 follows a Marine platoon sergeant in World War II’s Pacific campaign as he leads solo assaults against entrenched positions on the island’s black volcanic slopes. The story traces his journey from Massachusetts hometown to drill instructor to frontline leader with the 5th Marine Division, then walks listeners through the desperate fight to break a Japanese strongpoint that had pinned down his company. Along the way it explains the meaning behind his Medal of Honor citation, the tactical importance of his actions, and the leadership and character traits his example still illustrates today. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and this podcast episode is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 40Arsenal: M41 Walker Bulldog in Armored Reconnaissance, the Cold War
Arsenal: M41 Walker Bulldog in Armored Reconnaissance, the Cold War follows this fast, hard-hitting light tank from the Bay of Pigs beaches to South Vietnamese ridgelines during Lam Son 719 and the Easter Offensive. Listeners hear the Walker Bulldog in action under fire, the postwar problem it was built to solve, how designers chased speed and firepower on a light chassis, and what life felt like for four-man crews inside its cramped turret. The episode traces its combat record, export wars, late-life upgrades, and lasting influence on light tank design. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 38Breakout From Chosin: How Surrounded Marines Fought Their Way to the Sea
Headline Wednesday: Breakout from Chosin, Korean War follows a frozen column of Marines and soldiers fighting their way out of encirclement in the mountains of North Korea. From the narrow road along the Chosin Reservoir to the improvised airstrip at Hagaru-ri and the final push down toward Hungnam, this episode traces how a single lifeline of ice-bound pavement became the difference between survival and disaster. You will hear how Chinese forces tried to slam the door on the First Marine Division, how commanders on both sides read the terrain, and how discipline and leadership held the line when weapons froze and men faced endless waves in subzero cold. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com.This episode walks you through the full arc of the campaign: the drive north after Inchon, the slow realization that entire Chinese armies were in the hills, the night attacks that shattered perimeters, and the deliberate decision to “attack in another direction” to reach the sea. You will follow rifle companies clinging to hilltop outposts, engineers rebuilding a blown bridge in the mountains, and the final arrival at Hungnam as troops and refugees crowd the docks. It is designed as a clear, narrative guide you can use for personal study, a refresher before diving into books on the Korean War, or as a companion to staff ride planning and museum visits that focus on cold-weather operations and fighting withdrawals.

Ep 37This Week in History January 13th, 2026 – January 19th, 2026
This Week in U.S. Military History: January 13th, 2026–January 19th, 2026 traces a path from a Patriot double–envelopment at Cowpens to the thunder of Operation Desert Storm’s first strikes over Iraq. Along the way, listeners hear how the ratification of the Treaty of Paris turned rebellion into a recognized nation, how Union victories at Mill Springs and Fort Fisher helped secure border states and close the Confederacy’s last major Atlantic lifeline, and how a daring biplane landing on USS Pennsylvania nudged the Navy toward the carrier age.The story then shifts to world–shaping decisions and modern risks, from grand strategy set at Casablanca and the dedication of the Pentagon to President Eisenhower’s farewell warning about the military–industrial complex and the deadly 1969 fire aboard USS Enterprise that reshaped carrier safety. Throughout, the Tuesday feature “This Week in U.S. Military History” for Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com, uses these anniversaries to show how leadership, technology, and sacrifice intertwine across generations of American service.

Ep 36Beyond the Call: Major General James Lewis Day at Sugar Loaf Hill, Okinawa, 1945
Beyond the Call: Major General James Lewis Day at Sugar Loaf Hill, Okinawa, 1945 follows a young Marine corporal leading a battered group of Marines through four days of relentless combat in one of World War Two’s fiercest island battles. Listeners hear the story of the brutal approach to Sugar Loaf, the desperate defense of a tiny forward position, and the choices that preserved lives under constant fire. The narrative places Day’s courage within the wider Okinawa campaign and reflects on what his small-unit leadership reveals about duty, resilience, and responsibility. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.
Ep 35Arsenal: F-117 Nighthawk over Baghdad, Operation Desert Storm
Arsenal: F-117 Nighthawk over Baghdad, Operation Desert Storm follows the world’s first operational stealth attack aircraft from secret Nevada test flights into the heart of Iraq’s air defense network in nineteen ninety one, as lone pilots slip through radar belts to cut command centers, bunkers, and communications hubs out from under a heavily defended capital. Listeners hear how fear of modern surface to air missiles drove engineers toward low observability, how the Nighthawk’s faceted shape and precision weapons changed deep strike planning, and how its combat record, vulnerabilities, and retirement shaped later stealth fleets. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.