Crypto Transmission from KPH,
Saturday August 30, 2025 @ 2000 GMT!
On the evening of August 26, 2021, a suicide bomber from ISIS-K detonated an explosive vest at the Abbey Gate, close to U.S. service members who were screening Afghan civilians awaiting evacuation. Following the initial blast, gunmen fired into the crowd, amplifying the devastation. In addition to the 13 American service members, at least 169 Afghan civilians and 2 British nationals lost their lives, with over 150 more wounded.
Continue reading “Remembering Our Service Members Killed in the Kabul Attack, August 26, 2021”Vice Adm. Karl Thomas plays a crucial role in positioning the Navy to best leverage information to defeat U.S. adversaries. As deputy chief of naval operations for information warfare, N2N6, and the director of naval intelligence, Vice Adm. Thomas leverages the latest technological tools such as cyber; signals intelligence; electronic warfare and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance to control the information ecosystem. This ensures the Navy and its partners have accurate and timely information while manipulating, degrading or denying the enemy’s ability to do the same.
Continue reading “4 Information Warfare Updates From Navy Vice Adm. Karl Thomas”NSGA Bad Aibling commenced operations on the U.S. Army Field Station on October 1, 1994. Two years later, on March 15, 1996, the mission from NSGA Augsburg was transferred to NSGA Bad Aibling. On January 9, 2003, NSGA Bad Aibling was redesignated as NSG Detachment and on August 26, 2004 the NSG Det was closed and disestablished. The mission was transferred to NSG Detachment, Griesheim, Germany.
Continue reading “NSG Det Bad Aibling, Germany Disestablished, August 24, 2004”On November 2, 1942, Phil’s crew climbed aboard Super Man (B-24 LIBERATOR) and readied to go to war. They were heading into a desperate fight. North to south, Japan’s new empire starched five thousand miles, from the snowboard Aleutians to Java, hundreds of miles north of the equator.
Continue reading “Unbroken”By Raymond P. Schmidt
The last vestige of a link between the Naval Cryptologic organization and its home at 3801 Nebraska Avenue for over half a century has been dissolved. On Friday afternoon, the 22nd of October 2004, the Navy Chapel was closed in a dignified military-religious-secular service. The “church without a spire” ended its role as the religious focus for the North West Washington, DC campus one month short of its 80th anniversary, as attested by its cornerstone dated “November 1924.”
Continue reading “Navy Chapel “De-Sanctified” (3801 Nebraska Avenue)”