Divers Stumble Upon The Plane Wreckage of a WWII Airman That Went Missing In The Sea 80 Years Ago For decades, the depths of the Baltic Sea held a secret—a silent witness to one of World War II’s many ...
On June 20, 1944, a 22-year-old bombardier from Cleveland named Robert T. McCollum was flying in a B-24J Liberator over the ...
A 2019 discovery by Danish divers found the wreck in the depth of the Baltic Sea, leading excavators to later pull evidence ...
Decades after WWII, unexploded ordnance is leaking toxic chemicals into the Baltic Sea, posing a threat to marine life and ...
The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) announced that archaeologists were among an international and […] ...
A total of more than 14,000 artifacts were unearthed, of which 6,300 were considered to be historically significant, ...
As Russia and the US debate Ukraine’s future, countries on the Baltic Sea are ramping up preparations for a military conflict amid fears that Russia is preparing for a future war with NATO.
It is estimated that about 300,000 metric tons of unexploded ordnance (UXO) remain in the German Baltic Sea. Most of this originates from deliberate dumping after the end of the Second World War.
World War II: 2nd LT Robert T. McCollum was assigned to the 565th bombardment squadron of the United States Air Force in the ...
The Baltic nation’s Constitution Protection Bureau (SAB) assessed that Russia does not currently have the manpower and resources to threaten NATO thanks to “the costly invasion” against ...
We fully commit to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine. Ukraine should be given strong security guarantees,” the leaders of the Nordic and Baltic countries said in a joint statement ...