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How the US Army turned this former Nazi-base into a rapid-response war machine

Just a couple of hours north of Munich, the US Army runs its largest training site outside the United States. Once a Nazi artillery training ground, the sprawling base is now home to more than 16,000 troops kept ready to fight at a moment’s notice.

Soldiers train in trenches and with armored Stryker combat vehicles to maintain constant combat readiness “so they can answer America’s call in an instant,” said Hermes Acevedo, who was the command sergeant major and senior enlisted advisor to the garrison commander at US Army Garrison Bavaria when Business Insider’s Graham Flanagan visited last April.

That readiness serves as deterrence. From Bavaria, troops can reach the Czech Republic within about an hour and Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, in roughly 18 hours by road. “By us being ready, by us being here in this location, [it] kind of sends a signal,” Acevedo said.


Map shows how close Bavaria is to Kyiv

The gold square on the left is the Army base in Bavaria, which is less than a day’s drive from Ukraine’s capital. 

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He didn’t name a specific adversary, but soldiers in the trenches know who they’re preparing for.

As Russia’s war in Ukraine continues, the US Army’s presence in Germany is crucial. These soldiers could be the first ones in the fight, defending NATO’s eastern flank.

From Nazi training ground to NATO backbone


Aerial shot of trenches in US Army Garrison Bavaria.

A trench where US Army soldiers train at Garrison Bavaria. 

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US Army Garrison Bavaria’s origins date back to pre-World War I, when the Royal Bavarian Army developed a training area for its own artillery forces.

That role expanded under Adolf Hitler, when the Third Reich used the same grounds as a major training hub for the German Wehrmacht — Nazi’s unified armed forces.

At the end of World War II, US forces took control of the area. Today, it anchors US and NATO operations in Europe.


Army troops training in Bavaria for trench warfare.

US Army troops in Bavaria train for possible trench warfare against Russia. 

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The installation spans four main areas, including Tower Barracks and Rose Barracks. It houses the 7th Army Training Command — which sets standards for US Army Europe and Africa — and the 2nd Cavalry Regiment, a forward-positioned ground force.

“We’re not going to deploy to an incident in Europe,” Acevedo said. “We are already here.”

Training for a potential war with Russia


Headshot of Hermes Acevedo.

Hermes Acevedo, former command sergeant major and senior enlisted advisor to the garrison commander at US Army Garrison Bavaria. 

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Troops can leave their barracks and reach live training ranges in less than two minutes, Acevedo said. Once there, they train in all conditions — snow, rain, heat, and cold — to build what he described as instinctive responses.

“It’s all about readiness,” Acevedo said.

The base also runs an opposing force, or OPFOR, that mimics enemy tactics. “We’re basically supposed to act like Russians,” Spc. Aaron Jude said, noting they study the war in Ukraine sometimes through open-source material like social media.


Army soldier wearing black pajamas.

Soldiers in the OPFOR unit wear “black pajamas” and fight with AK-style rifles. 

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OPFOR units use AK-style rifles and train in trench warfare, reflecting the realities of the conflict.

“That’s what’s so awesome about this unit,” said Staff Sgt. Daniel Johnson, an OPFOR soldier. “Not only are we being able to train to our standards, but we’re also training to Russia’s standards. Honestly, to me, that’s like a really good way to understand our adversaries.”

Sensors across the training area collect data, allowing commanders to analyze performance and refine strategy. That constant feedback loop is central to the base’s role, allowing it to test equipment and decision-making under pressure.

A self-contained military ecosystem


Army soldier deploying a drone.

At US Army Garrison Bavaria, more than 16,000 troops are ready to fight at a moment’s notice. 

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The installation is designed to support both troops and their families. It includes more than 3,400 housing units, K—12 schools, childcare centers, and recreational facilities. Many families live both on and off base, integrated into nearby communities.

Acevedo said that these support systems help ease one of the biggest challenges for troops arriving from the US: uncertainty.

That environment is part of what keeps the base functioning at scale. Soldiers can focus on training and missions, while families have access to services designed to mirror life in the US.

The result is a well-oiled rapid-response war machine that turns a historically significant site into a modern military hub, readying troops for a hard fight.


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Meta’s Ray-Bans are a prank-video machine. Are they ruining society?

One of the most thrilling videos I’ve seen in 2026 is the footage shot on a pair of Meta Ray-Ban glasses by a shirtless man who ran onto the field during the Super Bowl. You watch as he yelps with glee, zigging and zagging away from officials as they try to catch him, until eventually one of the New England Patriots tackles him.

(Business Insider does not condone any form of potentially illegal disruption of sports games, even when it’s very amusing!)

This notable act of social deviancy is the perfect thing to capture on Meta Ray-Bans. You couldn’t do this with a phone. It made me wonder why I don’t see more viral videos shot this way. What, exactly, are all those people doing with their Meta glasses?

Meta’s glasses have been around in different iterations for about five years. Since then, the lineup has grown, with Meta adding more styles and features, including AI tools. Although Meta doesn’t break out sales numbers in its earnings reports, EssilorLuxottica, Ray-Ban’s owner and Meta’s partner in the project, has said that sales of the glasses tripled in 2025 and sold over a million units in 2024.

I set out to see what kinds of things people were posting on social media using their Meta glasses. And what I found — at least on my Instagram Reels and TikTok — is that one of the main uses is a lot of trolling.

Video after video was some version of a teenage boy or early 20-something man going into a big box store and saying weird things to the employees or customers, pranking fellow students in high school hallways, or initiating some awkward and admittedly often funny interaction with strangers on the street. A recurring theme was attempting to hit on women in public while wearing the glasses (usually unsuccessfully).

A mini trend in Meta glasses pranks involves putting fart spray (???) onto a scented candle and then walking around a Walmart or other store, asking customers for help deciding between two candle scents (one being fart-tainted). One example of the video genre I watched was captioned “getting kicked out of stores *Part 3*.” The creator’s other videos were mostly prank videos featuring Meta glasses on big-box store workers.

The fart candle prank is apparently now widely known enough online that there’s meta-commentary on it: videos about the dangers of being asked to smell a candle by someone in blinking glasses.

One TikTok I saw was called “planting the world’s biggest turd prank,” where the glasses-wearing person puts a novelty-sized fake poop into the bathroom of a fast-food restaurant and then tells the cashier to come look at it. The cashier is reluctant but laughs when he sees the obviously fake prop. Is this comedy? Sure. This, at least, was pretty clearly a prank with some prop comedy and a clear punchline, not merely harassing low-wage workers.

Certainly, people are using Meta glasses for more than just stupidity. I’m sure there are people who take videos of their kids or dogs or skate tricks and never post them to Instagram — very nice and wholesome stuff. Someone told me they bought pairs for the groomsmen to wear at their wedding, which sounds like a lovely idea.

The big thing most critics of these glasses worry about is privacy when someone is wearing a minimally detectable camera device. The glasses have an LED that switches on to signal that they’re filming, but it is fairly unobtrusive and requires others to know what the light means. In most of the videos I watched, when someone wearing glasses talks to strangers or cashiers, there doesn’t seem to be any awareness on the other people’s part that they’re being filmed. There’s a noticeable way people in videos tend to react when they know they’re being filmed with a phone; that stiffening recognition is absent in the Meta Ray-Ban videos.

The glasses have always been slightly controversial, in part thanks to Meta’s less-than-sterling reputation for privacy. Fight for the Future, an internet privacy advocacy group, has created flyers for restaurants and other establishments to post in their windows, stating they don’t allow Meta Ray-Bans inside.

In February, The New York Times reported that the company was considering adding facial recognition to its glasses. In an internal memo on the topic, a Meta employee wrote that the timing to launch might be perfect: “We will launch during a dynamic political environment where many civil society groups that we would expect to attack us would have their resources focused on other concerns.

These glasses have raised some reasonable concerns about what our society deems acceptable behavior and about privacy expectations in public spaces. Being legally allowed to film in public spaces is an important part of our freedom of speech and expression. Like other types of unpleasant speech, the right to do it doesn’t mean people can’t think you’re a jerk for doing it. Being annoying in a Walmart isn’t a crime (if it were, I’d be making a lot more citizen’s arrests), but we as a society can agree that it sucks and that you shouldn’t do it, and also perhaps that Meta offering a product that helps erode social decorum is not great.

“People are responsible for following the law, whether or not they’re wearing Ray-Ban Metas. Unlike smartphones, our glasses have an LED light that activates whenever someone captures content, so it’s clear the device is recording,” Tracy Clayton, a spokesperson for Meta, told Business Insider. “And as with any recording device, people shouldn’t use them for engaging in harmful activities like harassment, infringing on privacy rights, or capturing sensitive information.”

Prank videos have been a popular genre on YouTube for a long time, and hidden camera prank shows have been a television staple since the 1980s. Meta glasses are lowering the barrier to entry. A well-executed hidden camera prank is hilarious, but a lot of these are crummy ones that are more harassment than humor.

In terms of potential global harms, tricking someone into sniffing a fart candle is pretty mild. But the fact that there’s just so much of this kind of crummy prank content made with Meta glasses gives me pause. If this is what ultimately turns out to be the biggest use of these glasses, well, it’s bad, but not in the way most skeptics of the glasses initially imagined.




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Videos show how Ukrainian helicopter crews use machine guns to hunt Russia’s exploding Shahed drones

Ukraine just gave us an extended look at one of its emerging tactics against Russia’s Shaheds: using helicopters to shoot the drones from above.

The Ukrainian navy published a two-minute montage of such operations on Thursday, saying that a helicopter crew had destroyed eight Shahed exploding drones and Gerbera decoy drones in a single day.

Cockpit and gun camera footage showed the Ukrainians engaging at least five delta-wing drones in flight, with another clip showing unidentified wreckage smoking on the ground.

Some clips indicate that at least one aerial engagement happened in the early morning or at night. Thermal footage from a gun camera showed the operator firing at a delta-wing drone, tracking its flight above open terrain before a screen flash indicates the drone was destroyed.

Other standard optical footage, filmed from a gun camera or the cockpit, appears to show several drones being destroyed high above the clouds or over water near a coastal settlement.

Additionally, an M134 minigun can be seen mounted from a helicopter’s side door, though the videos didn’t show the weapon itself in action.

The clips indicate some of the ideal conditions for downing a Shahed.

For one, the helicopter has to match the drone’s speed and trajectory and gain enough altitude to allow the minigun to fire downward at the Shahed. The chopper crew also needs to come within visual range of the drone to engage.

The footage comes several months after Ukraine said it would officially begin incorporating helicopter crews into its air defense network against Russia’s one-way attack drones, which Moscow uses in mass waves to pressure Ukrainian cities.

Because Russia mass-produces the Shahed and Gerbera, Kyiv has sought more inexpensive means, such as machine guns, instead of traditional antiaircraft missiles to counter them.

Ukraine’s commander in chief, Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi, said in October that helicopters could sometimes destroy up to 40% of Russian Shaheds and Gerberas in one area.

Thermal and infrared cameras, such as the one seen in the latest footage, were among the systems that Syrskyi said would be equipped on such helicopters to improve their effectiveness.

Ukraine also uses ground crews with interceptor drones or truck-mounted machine guns to destroy Shaheds, but a helicopter crew can reposition much faster to engage multiple threats or hunt down a Russian drone that changes its flight trajectory.

The latter scenario became increasingly common as Russia was found to be outfitting Shaheds with more advanced communications and guidance systems, and, in rare cases, artificial intelligence.

Helicopters also allow for engagements at higher altitudes. Russia often directs its Shaheds to approach their targets at above 6,500 feet before swooping down to attack, making it more difficult for ground-based crews to hit the drones.

Aside from helicopters, Ukrainian troops have also been seen using M134 miniguns on turboprop planes to shoot down Shaheds.

Meanwhile, Russia has since been reported to be attempting to counter the Ukrainian helicopters by equipping its Shaheds with R-60 air-to-air missiles.

In November, Ukraine’s deputy minister of defense for innovation told Business Insider’s Jake Epstein that Moscow was also directly targeting patrolling helicopters and aircraft with Shaheds.




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How much are Florence and the Machine tickets? The tour kicks off in February, and seats are selling fast

While many people handle grief in private, Florence and the Machine processed hers in an album released on Halloween. Some fans got a taste when the band performed “Sympathy Magic” on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. It’s an enchanting series of songs that make you feel like you’re meandering deep through a forest, encountering mythical beings before getting on a dark horse and clomping straight through the fog and shadows of grief straight through to heaven itself. To say that the album is a journey is an understatement. It is otherworldly and ethereal. Excitingly, fans can experience it all, live, and I’m here to help by breaking down how to get Florence and the Machine tickets.

Even if you’re not yet a fan of the new album, Florence and the Machine have had several hits over the years. While not all of them are quite as witchy or grief-ridden as this one was, Florence Welch’s voice brings you through powerful moments that will inspire you to make your way through it to the other side, from “Dog Days Are Over” to “Shake It Out.”

Florence and the Machine are going on tour again next year. I’m here to bring you tips on how to have an experience that will leave you feeling an echo afterward. Come check out how to get the best deals on tickets from StubHub and VividSeats.

Florence and the Machine’s 2026 tour schedule

Florence and the Machine announced the coming concerts a week before they announced their new album: “Everybody Screams.” The tour is highly anticipated among fans who have become enchanted with the recent Halloween album drop.

The band is playing in several major cities and venues across the United States. In cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York, they’ll be there for a couple of days to help ensure that more fans can hear them before they move on to the next location.

Several of the stops along the tour are paired with other artists.

North America


International

* Indicates a tour date shared with Rachel Chinouriri.

† Indicates a tour date shared with Sofia Isella.

‡ Indicates a tour date shared with CMAT.

§ Indicates a tour date shared with Mannequin Pussy.


How to buy tickets for Florence and the Machine’s 2026 concert tour

Florence and the Machine tickets went on presale recently. This gives aspiring concertgoers a lot of options for possibly snagging seats, with tickets up for grabs on Ticketmaster as well as on StubHub and VividSeats.

There is one festival appearance scheduled during the tour on Friday, July 3, 2026. That appearance in Milan is part of the I Days, a major festival that takes place annually in Italy.

Some tickets are available to purchase via StubHub’s UK ticketing portal. Those tickets are priced in British currency to reflect that.

The most expensive tickets currently are for the France and Germany shows. They are hundreds of dollars more than any of the other dates. When I researched purchasing tickets outside the United States, I found information stating that tariffs were in place that could be applied. Shoppers will want to be mindful of this when budgeting their spending.

How much are tickets?

Currently, resale tickets are not tremendously more expensive than their original counterparts, but it’s still early. We are in the pre-sale after all.

The price ranges for tickets are quite substantial, even for the cheapest tickets. The lowest tickets are about $70 on a handful of dates. They can then reach upward of a couple of hundred dollars for tickets on Stubhub, to over $500 for the highest-priced tickets on VividSeats.

That said, while I did find affordable tickets, I also found expensive ones. For example, if someone wanted to go to the show on May 20th in really good available seats in a lower bowl corner area of Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, they’d be looking at paying over $2,500 a ticket. While those are good seats, they aren’t even the top tier for the venue. Concert suite tickets at the Kia Forum can range between $5,000 and $15,000. People drop serious money going to events there and spare no expense to see their favorite performers. There is a huge difference not only in cost but in the experience itself when there.

Who is opening for Florence and the Machine’s tour?

Florence and the Machine is sharing the tour with a few other artists. The paired bands are marked with their corresponding dates on the charts above. The artists going with Florence and the Machine are: *Rachel Chinouriri in the early April dates, †Sofia Isella in mid April, ‡CMAT in the later April to early May dates, and §Mannequin Pussy for May dates.

Florence and the Machine are the big name for the date that they are headlining the Italian festival scheduled in July.

Will there be international tour dates?

There are lots of opportunities to see Florence and the Machine internationally. In fact, some of the tour’s biggest shows are international dates.

When was the Florence and the Machine presale?

Tickets for Florence and the Machine went on sale via presale from November 3, 2025, at 10 a.m. ET to noon ET. This presale was special for American Express (AMEX) holders, as you had to pay for your tickets using an American Express card. An American Express gift card did not work for purchases. A select number of tickets were available with this pre-sale. The artist presale of tickets was also on November 3, 2025, and November 4, 2025. This was open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. local time on Tuesday and was available to fans who had signed up through the artist’s website. Tickets for the show officially go on sale to the general public on November 5, 2025.

You can purchase logo and accolade licensing to this story here.

Disclosure: Written and researched by the Insider Reviews team. We highlight products and services you might find interesting. If you buy them, we may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our partners. We may receive products free of charge from manufacturers to test. This does not drive our decision as to whether or not a product is featured or recommended. We operate independently from our advertising team. We welcome your feedback. Email us at reviews@businessinsider.com.




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