According to data released to Salon by the Army's Combat Readiness/Safety Center, only 24 of the 3,059 U.S. Army soldiers killed in Iraq since the invasion in 2003 died by fratricide.
Some observers, however, called the new data fishy. "That is almost impossible," said Geoffrey Wawro, director of the University of North Texas' Military History Center.



A JetBlue flight from the small Caribbean nation of Curaçao halted its ascent to avoid colliding...
The US’s sharpening ideological polarization is affecting a wider and much more junior cross-section of the...





























