John Eisenhower graduated from West Point 82 years ago today. His father was unable to attend due to a prior engagement. pic.twitter.com/YUO866pZuy
— Eddy Elfenbein (@EddyElfenbein) June 6, 2026
John Eisenhower graduated from West Point 82 years ago today. His father was unable to attend due to a prior engagement. pic.twitter.com/YUO866pZuy
— Eddy Elfenbein (@EddyElfenbein) June 6, 2026
Quote:
On June 8, 1943, one of the most powerful warships ever built was destroyed in 15 minutes. No American planes. No submarines. No enemy in sight.
IJN Mutsu was one of the "Big Seven" treaty battleships, the most powerful class of warship allowed to exist under the Washington Naval Treaty. 41,000 tons of steel, 16-inch guns, a floating fortress that had sailed through Midway and Guadalcanal without a scratch.
She was anchored at Hashirajima, Japan's most secure fleet anchorage. A place so safe it was considered a parking lot, not a battlefield. 113 young naval flight cadets were aboard that afternoon for a routine familiarization tour. They were teenagers, essentially on a field trip.
At 12:13 PM, the magazine beneath turret No. 3 detonated.
The blast was so violent it cut the ship clean in two. The forward section, nearly 500 feet of warship, capsized to starboard and vanished beneath the water almost instantly. The stern section rose out of the sea at a grotesque angle and floated there, upright and burning, for hours, before finally sinking at 2 AM the next morning, as if refusing to accept what had happened.
Of the 1,474 men and boys aboard, 353 survived.
Of the 113 cadets, only 13 made it out alive.
The Japanese Navy's investigation concluded it was sabotage. A single gunner's mate from turret No. 3, facing a court martial for petty theft, had apparently decided to start a small fire inside the magazine as a diversion so he could escape the ship before his trial. He had disabled the temperature sensors beforehand. He miscalculated. The fire hit the propellant charges. The charges hit the magazine. The magazine killed 1,121 people.
His body was reportedly found in the wreckage.
Japan's response was not grief. It was silence.
The entire event was classified as a state secret. The bodies of the dead were quietly collected and cremated in mass burnings with no ceremony and no public acknowledgment. The ship's captain, Teruhiko Miyoshi, was found dead on June 17. His wife was not informed of his death until January 1944, seven months later.
Families of the dead received no explanation. No official word. Some were simply told their sons and husbands had "died in service." The loss of a Nagato-class battleship, one of only two ever built, was erased from official memory while the war continued around it.
To this day, not everyone buys the sabotage story. Some historians believe the investigation was designed to blame a dead man and protect the navy's reputation, covering up catastrophic negligence in ammunition storage procedures instead.
The wreck was discovered after the war. Partially salvaged in the 1970s. The guns are on display in Japan.
One man's court martial for stealing. 1,121 dead. A battleship erased from history.
On June 8, 1943, one of the most powerful warships ever built was destroyed in 15 minutes. No American planes. No submarines. No enemy in sight.
— Hidden History (@HiddenHistoryYT) June 8, 2026
IJN Mutsu was one of the "Big Seven" treaty battleships, the most powerful class of warship allowed to exist under the Washington… pic.twitter.com/HZITWJHys8
Quote:
On this day in 1944, USS Harder completed one of the most audacious submarine patrols in the history of naval warfare.
Here's what Commander Sam Dealey actually did.
He took Harder to within 6 miles of the main Japanese fleet anchorage at Tawi Tawi in the Philippines. Not 60 miles. Not 16. Six. Close enough to see the fleet. Then he started killing destroyers.
June 6: Minazuki, sunk. June 7: Hayanami, sunk. June 9: Tanikaze, sunk. Two more damaged or sunk in ensuing days.
Five destroyers in a single patrol. Each attack was close-range. Each one put Harder inside the kill radius of the explosion.
But the real damage wasn't just the ships.
Dealey's attacks were so relentless and so precise that Japanese Admiral Toyoda became convinced the entire area surrounding Tawi Tawi was crawling with American submarines. It wasn't. It was mostly just Harder.
Spooked by what he believed was a massive wolfpack, Admiral Ozawa pulled the Mobile Fleet out of Tawi Tawi a full day ahead of schedule. The premature departure wrecked Japanese battle timing and coordination. Days later, they sailed into the Battle of the Philippine Sea, totally disorganized.
The Japanese lost three carriers and over 600 aircraft in what Americans called "The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot."
One submarine, one commander, changed the course of the entire Pacific campaign.
Dealey received the Medal of Honor.
On August 24, 1944, just over two months after this patrol, USS Harder was attacked by Japanese depth charges in Dasol Bay. She went down with all hands. No survivors. The crew was never recovered.
Sam Dealey's Medal of Honor was awarded posthumously.
There are men who changed history without anyone ever knowing their name. Sam Dealey is one of them.
On this day in 1944, USS Harder completed one of the most audacious submarine patrols in the history of naval warfare.
— Hidden History (@HiddenHistoryYT) June 10, 2026
Here's what Commander Sam Dealey actually did.
He took Harder to within 6 miles of the main Japanese fleet anchorage at Tawi Tawi in the Philippines. Not 60… pic.twitter.com/rRgxuuRzcZ
The Committee of Five—John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Robert Livingston, and Roger Sherman—was appointed to draft the Declaration of Independence 250 years ago today.
— Library of Congress (@librarycongress) June 11, 2026
Jefferson's draft of the document is here at the Library, and will be featured in a new… pic.twitter.com/Ja1jHvqgkT
If you have seen Band of Brothers, you remember the scene. Winters standing alone in the middle of a road, fully exposed to German machine gun fire, screaming at his pinned-down men to move.
— Voices of WW2 (@VoicesofWW2) June 12, 2026
That happened on this day, June 12, 1944. And the real story around it is even bigger… pic.twitter.com/MqmMsGPc4E
Quote:
1830 French invasion of Algeria. A little something to get the taste of Waterloo out of their mouths.
1873 Susan B. Anthony is fined $100 for attempting to vote in the 1872 presidential election, goes on to star in a particularly ugly dollar coin.
1928 Aviator Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly in an aircraft across the Atlantic Ocean (she is a passenger; Wilmer Stutz is the pilot and Lou Gordon the mechanic).
1940 Appeal of June 18 by Charles de Gaulle, otherwise known as the "Let's you and them fight" speech. Meanwhile on the same day, Winston Churchill gives his "Finest Hour" speech.
1945 William Joyce (Lord Haw-Haw) is charged with treason for radio broadcasts supporting our enemies.
1953 The Egyptian Revolution f 1952 ends with the overthrow of the Muhammad Ali Dynasty and the declaration of the Republic of Egypt.
1959 Democrat Governor of Louisiana Earl K. Long is committed to a state mental hospital; he responds by having the hospital's director fired and replaced with a crony who proceeds to proclaim him perfectly sane. (This was precipitated by his wife. She was upset that he was diddling a stripper, Blaze Starr. If she'd have kept her mouth shut, like Hillary did for Bill, he might have become president.). Despite this, he was elected to the US House in 1960 by the people of Louisiana, before dying.
Today on June 18, President Trump will award the Medal of Honor to retired Recon Marine Major James Capers Jr. for his heroism during a 1967 ambush in Vietnam.
— Special Ops Magazine (@specialopsmag) June 18, 2026
Major Capers was shot twice and suffered 17 shrapnel wounds and other injuries during the April 1967 ambush.
Not… pic.twitter.com/R3XaQkIRZA
Quote:
Today on June 18, President Trump will award the Medal of Honor to retired Recon Marine Major James Capers Jr. for his heroism during a 1967 ambush in Vietnam.
Major Capers was shot twice and suffered 17 shrapnel wounds and other injuries during the April 1967 ambush.
Not only did Capers lead his team to safety, but he twice tried to get out of the helicopter carrying the rest of his teammates so that it would be light enough to take off, and had to be pulled back inside by his men.
Major Capers is the first Black Marine to lead a reconnaissance company and to receive a battlefield commission.
The 1967 ambush began when hidden explosives detonated. Capers suffered shrapnel wounds to his abdomen and other parts of his body and a broken leg. Despite his wounds, he ordered a mortar strike on the team's position to keep the enemy at bay.
Then, even after losing a significant amount of blood and being administered morphine, he led his team to a helicopter landing zone. When a helicopter landed, Capers refused to get on board unless the crew took the body of the team's military working dog.
Capers was originally awarded the Bronze Star with "V" device for his heroism, which was upgraded to the Silver Star in 2010.
Full story here: https://t.co/m2nRhQNi3J
— Thenewarea51 (@thenewarea51) June 19, 2026
Quote:
June 19, 1944. The Taiho was everything Japan had learned in three years of war built into one ship.
She was the newest carrier in the fleet, the largest they had ever launched, and the only one with a heavily armored flight deck meant to shrug off the bombs that had doomed her predecessors at Midway.
She had been in service only three months. And on this morning she carried the flag of Admiral Ozawa himself, the commander of Japan's entire carrier force. The whole battle was being run from her decks.
As she turned into the wind and launched her planes, an American submarine called the Albacore was lining her up in its sights. The sub's targeting computer suddenly malfunctioned, so her captain fired a spread of six torpedoes by eye and instinct alone.
One young Japanese pilot, Sakio Komatsu, had just lifted off the deck. He spotted a torpedo cutting straight toward his brand new flagship and made an instant decision. He dove his plane directly into it. He died in the explosion and saved the ship from that one. But another torpedo slipped past and struck home.
At first the damage looked almost survivable. The hit jammed the forward aircraft elevator and cracked open the tanks holding her aviation fuel.
Then came the chain of mistakes that doomed her. The fuel she carried was unusually volatile, and fumes began filling the hangars. A young, inexperienced damage control officer, trying to clear the air, ordered the ship's ventilation system run wide open at full power.
Instead of removing the danger, it pumped explosive vapor into every sealed compartment of the ship. The Taiho became a floating bomb waiting for a single spark.
That afternoon she found it. A series of titanic explosions ripped her open from the inside, tore through her armored decks, and broke the great carrier apart. Ozawa barely escaped, carried off to another ship to keep fighting.
The Taiho went down taking around 1,650 of her crew with her. The most powerful aircraft carrier Japan ever built, destroyed on her very first battle, killed not by enemy guns but by one lucky torpedo and her own crew's fatal error.
The mayor flaw was probably the aviation fuel tanks itself. On US carriers these were separate tanks within intrgral compartments in the ship. On japanese carriers these tanks were the integral compartments itself. That meant much more risks for leakage.
— Standardspruchspule (@MaXolmX) June 20, 2026
On this day in 1864, the most feared raider on the seas was sunk in an hour off the coast of France, with a crowd watching from shore.
— Hidden History (@HiddenHistoryYT) June 20, 2026
For two years the CSS Alabama hunted Union merchant ships across the Atlantic, the Caribbean, and halfway around the world, burning or capturing… pic.twitter.com/m1WxKN532T
On this day in 1931, a one eyed roughneck from Oklahoma took off to fly around the entire planet.
— Echoes of War (@EchoesofWarYT) June 23, 2026
Wiley Post lost his left eye in an oilfield accident and wore a patch the rest of his life. People figured a man with one eye had no business flying, let alone circling the globe.… pic.twitter.com/yGCF2L8WIY
76 years ago today, North Korean armies crossed the 38th Parallel and invaded South Korea, beginning the Korean War. United States and United Nations forces rushed in to support South Korea. The war lasted 38 months, resulting in more than 36,000 American lives lost and more than… pic.twitter.com/rKG5EMtIzi
— National Mall NPS (@NationalMallNPS) June 25, 2026
Quote:
Just before 9:45pm on June 25th, 1996, a fuel truck was driven into the parking lot of military housing complex Building 131 in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. It was followed by a white car. The driver of the fuel truck jumped from his seat and ran to the white trail vehicle which then took off at a high rate of speed. Moments later an explosion estimated at ten tons of TNT detonated outside Khobar Towers which housed 2000 members of the U.S. Air Force's 440th Airlift Wing involved with enforcing the no-fly zone against Iraq. 19 U.S. personnel were killed and over 500 people were wounded. Evidence suggests that the explosives were smuggled into Saudi Arabia by Lebanon's Hezbollah operating out of the Bekaa Valley with assistance from Iran's Revolutionary Guards. Iranian-backed Saudi Hezbollah al-Hejaz advance teams had conducted close target reconnaissance forty times prior to the attack and had been observed and reported on ten of those occasions. FBI investigators believe the attack was planned over a three year period with approval and backing from Iran with the goal of pushing U.S. troops out of Saudi Arabia and the greater Gulf Region. In 2006 a U.S. federal court found Hezbollah and Iran guilty of the bombing and ordered Iran to pay $254.5 million to the families of those killed in the attack. In 2018 Iran was again implicated in the attack and ordered by a U.S. federal court to pay victims $104.7 million. In 2020 a U.S. District Court cited evidence that Iran aided Hezbollah in carrying out the attack and ruled that Iran pay $879 million in damages. Iran continues to deny any role in the bombing and has yet to pay damages to the families of those wounded or killed.
For additional information read BEIRUT RULES by @fred_burton and @Samuel_M_Katz , THE LOOMING TOWER by Lawrence Wright, THE SECRET WAR WITH IRAN by Ronen Bergman, and spend some time in the pages of THE 9/11 COMMISSION REPORT.
Just before 9:45pm on June 25th, 1996, a fuel truck was driven into the parking lot of military housing complex Building 131 in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. It was followed by a white car. The driver of the fuel truck jumped from his seat and ran to the white trail vehicle which then… pic.twitter.com/jZjcYLlJdL
— Jack Carr (@JackCarrUSA) June 26, 2026
Today we celebrate Vidovdan, one of the most important National Holiday.
— Based Serbia (@SerbiaBased) June 28, 2026
On this day in 1389 Serbian army led by the Holy Prince Lazar defended Christian Europe from the Ottomans, in the Battle of Kosovo.
🇷🇸☦️ pic.twitter.com/9DoBiJZpuu
Fifty years ago today, Air France Captain Michel Bacos showed the world what true moral courage looks like.
— Arsen Ostrovsky (@Ostrov_A) June 28, 2026
When Flight 139 was hijacked by Palestinian and German terrorists and flown to Entebbe, the non-Jewish passengers were eventually released. Bacos and his crew were also… pic.twitter.com/fqoCnE9M5I
Quote:
Fifty years ago today, Air France Captain Michel Bacos showed the world what true moral courage looks like.
When Flight 139 was hijacked by Palestinian and German terrorists and flown to Entebbe, the non-Jewish passengers were eventually released. Bacos and his crew were also offered their freedom.
However, Bacos, who also served in the French army under DeGaulle, refused to leave his Jewish passengers. All his crew also refused, without exception.
Instead, they chose to remain alongside the 94 Jewish hostages, fully aware of the danger they faced. As Bacos later said, abandoning his passengers was simply "unimaginable."
Days later, they were freed in the legendary Israeli rescue mission, Operation Entebbe, led by Yoni Netanyahu, who would die in the battle.
For his extraordinary courage, Bacos was honoured by both France and Israel. Yet his greatest legacy was not the medals he received, but the example he set: that decency, duty and humanity must never yield to terror or antisemitism.
Michel Bacos was a true hero. May his life, his courage and his memory forever be a blessing and an inspiration.