Category: Security

  • Cuba pauses release of prisoners, kicks off military exercises in reaction to Trump

    Entrenched in their “Homeland or Death” chant and vowing to prevail against the “imperialist onslaught,” Cuba’s leader have paused the release of political prisoners and kicked off military exercises following President Donald Trump’s first-day decision to put the country back on the list of nations that sponsor terrorism.

    Just a week earlier, former President Joe Biden had taken Cuba off the list after telling Congress the Cuban government did not provide “any support for international terrorism during the preceding six-month period.”

    Trump also nullified Biden’s decision to eliminate a list of sanctioned Cuban military companies and hotels.

    Biden’s measures were instrumental in a deal mediated by the Vatican, under which the Cuban government agreed to release 553 “prisoners.” While it was unclear whether some or all would be political prisoners, shortly after Biden’s announcement Cuban authorities started releasing political prisoners, as many as 170, according to a recount by an independent media coalition.

    But that came to a halt after Trump reversed Biden’s actions on Monday evening shortly after his inauguration.

    On Wednesday, Justicia11J, an organization that tracks politically motivated arrests in Cuba, sounded the alert and said in a statement that they had not received information of new prisoners released since Monday.

    “The absence of reports from the Island alarms us,” the group said. “We demand that the Havana regime not pause the release of people deprived of liberty for political reasons, in compliance with the commitments made to the Catholic Church. We also ask that, in an exercise of transparency that they lack so far, the authorities make public the list of people who have benefited to date.”

    According to the group’s data, 167 political prisoners have been released or received some other relief. But none have been pardoned or received amnesty, which makes them vulnerable to returning to prison, the group warned.

    Freedom House, a U.S.-based organization that issues an annual report on the respect of freedoms in countries around the world, urged the Cuban government to release all political prisoners, which several human rights groups say surpass a thousand.

    “Justice requires the release of all political prisoners in Cuba, an end to political imprisonment as a tool for social control, and systemic reforms by the Díaz-Canel regime that guarantee the full exercise of fundamental rights without fear of reprisal,” the organization said. “Without those reforms, this release risks perpetuating a revolving door of political imprisonment, wherein the Cuban regime will fill now-empty prison cells with new arbitrarily detained people in the coming weeks and months.”

    But Trump’s decision seems to have struck a chord, given the tone of Cuban authorities’ reactions.

    “President Trump, drunk with arrogance, decides, for no good reason, #Cuba sponsors terrorism,” said Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez in an English publication on X. “He knows he’s LYING. He’s bent on strengthening punishment & economic warfare vs Cuban families. He’ll cause harm but won’t succeed in breaking our people’s firm determination.”

    Rodríguez also called Trump’s policies “medieval.”

    In a similar light, Cuba’s leader, Miguel Díaz-Canel, said Trump’s decision to put Cuba back on the list was an “act of arrogance and contempt for the truth… an act of mockery and abuse (that) confirms the discredit of the lists and unilateral coercive mechanisms of the U.S. government.”

    A Tuesday statement simply signed by “the revolutionary government” said: “Trump has interpreted his coming to power as the coronation of an emperor.” It labels his decision to designate Cuba as a sponsor of terror as an “act of aggression by the United States government against the Cuban people” that would not succeed in derailing the country from its socialist path.

    The statement end ends with the customary “Homeland or Death. We will prevail.”

    On Wednesday, the Armed Forces Ministry said it was beginning military exercises that had been postponed in November to “raise the country’s readiness for defense and the preparation of troops and the population to face the different actions of the enemy.”

    In a Wednesday meeting surrounded by military commanders and government officials, Díaz-Canel made clear that meant the United States.

    “We are doing this exercise in the midst of a situation that is almost real,” he said. “We are subjected to a policy by the new leadership of the United States government that is totally hegemonic, interventionist, that treats Cuba with tremendous contempt and we have already begun to see its first actions against the revolution.”

    In another sign that Díaz-Canel’s title of commander in chief of the armed forces is essentially symbolic, he then “proposed” to the officially retired general Raúl Castro, sitting in the first row facing Díaz-Canel during the meeting, to kick off the military exercises that are supposed to last until Saturday. Castro stood up and simply said: “Begin.”

    The rhetoric and posturing come after an initial muted response to Trump’s victory, as officials discreetly sought advice from contacts in the United States on how to handle relations with the new president. But officials became unsettled when news broke that U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, a Cuban American Republican from Florida whom Cuba considers an archenemy, was likely to become the next U.S. secretary of state, sources who asked not to be named to speak of their interactions with Cuban officials, said. Rubio has since been confirmed by the U.S. Senate.

    Still, Cuban authorities released opposition leader José Daniel Ferrer last week, which some experts saw as a signal the Cuban government wanted to show it was serious about the agreement with the Vatican.

    Four days later, the island’s government was again on the U.S. blacklist.

    A Cuban diplomat asked on X, “What did Cuba do in six days to deserve to return to a list of those who sponsor terrorism?”

    Cuban authorities have long argued the designation is unjustified, burdens the island’s economy and hurts the population.

    The country has been on and off the list since former President Ronald Reagan first included it in 1982. Former President Barack Obama removed it in 2015 as a condition to reopening the U.S. Embassy in Havana, and Trump put it back on the list in the final days of his first term in January 2021.

    At that time, Trump cited Cuba’s harboring fugitives of American justice and ELN guerrilla leaders wanted by the Colombian government of former president Iván Duque. Cuba refused to extradite them, claiming it went against international law and a peace treaty between the guerrillas and the Colombian government that Cuba helped broker.

    Current Colombian president Gustavo Petro dropped the extradition request and asked former president Biden to remove Cuba from the terror-sponsor list. A senior official in the Biden administration told reporters last week that Petro’s outreach had played a role in Biden’s decision to delist Cuba.

    But in a plot twist Thursday following new acts of violence by the ELN, Colombia’s attorney general Luz Adriana Camargo said her office would “reactivate the extradition request” of ELN leaders once they have been located “in Cuba or elsewhere.”

    ___

    © 2025 Miami Herald

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Man who was fired from Space Force post is Trump’s pick for key Air Force role

    President Donald Trump announced plans to nominate an Idaho resident to be the U.S. Air Force’s second in command.

    “I am pleased to announce that Lieutenant Colonel Matthew Lohmeier will be the next United States Under Secretary of the Air Force,” Trump wrote on social media Friday.

    As undersecretary, Lohmeier would be the No. 2-ranked civilian and the deputy to Trump’s Air Force Secretary nominee, Troy Meink.

    Lohmeier joined the Air Force in 2006 and became an instructor pilot after graduating from the Air Force Academy, according to a biography on Congress’ website. He transferred to the Space Force in October 2020 and soon after took command of the 11th Space Warning Squadron, which provides missile warning and tracking worldwide, according to the Air Force Times.

    The squadron is located at Buckley Space Force Base in Aurora, Colorado, just outside of Denver.

    Lohmeier’s Facebook page says he lives in Boise, though he is originally from Tucson, Arizona. His website says he “lives with his wife and children in Idaho.”

    He first gained national attention in 2021 after self-publishing a book purporting that Marxist ideology had become widespread within the United States military. The book also criticized claims of white supremacy within the military, ideas about systemic racism, the Black Lives Matter movement and diversity initiatives.

    Soon after, officials fired Lohmeier from his Space Force command position for comments made while promoting the book on conservative podcasts.

    “This decision was based on public comments made by Lt. Col. Lohmeier in a recent podcast,” a Space Force spokesperson told Military.com. “Lt. Gen. Whiting has initiated a Command Directed Investigation on whether these comments constituted prohibited partisan political activity.”

    The Air Force Office of Inspector General began investigating Lohmeier but dropped the inquiry after he voluntarily left active duty, according to The Air Force Times and Lohmeier’s website.

    It would appear that Lohmeier’s political ideology is exactly what earned him Trump’s nomination. “Matthew will work with the GREAT Secretary of Defense Nominee, Pete Hegseth, to end the devastating ‘woke’ policies that have destroyed our Military, and make our Country STRONG AGAIN.”

    The Idahoan thanked Trump in a social media post, saying he was “very much looking forward to continuing (his) service to our great men and women in uniform.”

    The Senate will need to approve Lohmeier’s nomination.

    ___

    © 2025 The Idaho Statesman

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Marine vet fights back after cops seized $87,000

    A Marine veteran is fighting back and warning about a lack of accountability after the Nevada Highway Patrol seized $87,000 from him during a traffic stop in 2021 through a legal loophole.

    Marine veteran Stephen Lara, the plaintiff in a recent lawsuit against the state, told Fox News that he was pulled over by a Nevada Highway Patrol officer in February of 2021 and was accused of following too closely behind a semi-truck and driving under the speed limit. While he was pulled over, Lara was asked to exit the vehicle as an officer asked him if he had any “large amounts of United States currency in the vehicle.”

    After explaining that he was traveling with cash in the vehicle, the Marine veteran allowed police officers to search his car, where they discovered $87,000 located in a plastic bag with paystubs and bank receipts.

    The officers then had a police dog sniff the money and informed Lara that the dog was “alerted” to the money, indicating that the money could be linked to drugs. As a result, the Nevada police officers seized the Marine veteran’s money and used civil asset forfeiture to deliver it to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).

    While Lara was never charged with a crime, Fox News reported that civil asset forfeiture allows the government to seize and retain a person’s property if the government claims it is linked to criminal activity.

    READ MORE: Marine vet kicked off flight for ‘threatening’ shirt: Report

    Fox News reported that while Nevada requires clear and convincing evidence for the government to seize property under civil asset forfeiture, an “equitable sharing” program allows local and state law enforcement officials to coordinate with federal agencies to work around typical restrictions. The program also allows federal agencies to return as much as 80% of the proceeds to state agencies.

    According to Fox News, Lara was later able to recover his seized assets with the help of a nonprofit law firm and sued the state for damages.

    “This is personal to me,” Lara said. “It does something to you when you have a country that pays you a retirement check for the service you put in, and it’s that same country that’s working in collusion with these local state police departments to try to take the very money that they pay you for retirement.”

    According to Fox News, Nevada Second Judicial District Judge Connie J. Steinheimer recently ruled that the Nevada Highway Patrol is “not explicitly permitted” by the legislature to “utilize the federal process for forfeiture” and “undermine this bedrock policy and effectively circumvent Nevada’s civil asset forfeiture statutes by electing to participate in the federal equitable sharing program.”

    Despite the recent legal victory, Lara told Fox News, “The fight is not over.”


    Source: American Military News

  • US Marines arrive at southern border, Trump admin says

    The Trump administration released a video on Friday of the U.S. Marine Corps arriving at the southern border between the United States and Mexico and helping assist U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents as they undertake a mission to “secure America.”

    On Friday afternoon, the White House shared a video on X, formerly Twitter, showcasing the U.S. Marine Corps’ arrival at the southern border. The White House tweeted, “The US Marine Corps Is On The Border Assisting CBP With The Mission To Secure America. Promise Made –> Promise KEPT!”

    In the video, the U.S. Marines can be seen arriving in Boeing V-22 Osprey aircraft, unloading at the southern border, and talking with U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials.

    Earlier this week, the Department of Defense announced that 1,500 active-duty U.S. troops were being sent to the southern border along with intelligence and air assets to “augment troops already conducting enforcement operations in that region.” President Donald Trump’s Department of Defense also announced that the 1,500 active-duty troops would include 500 Marines.

    “We anticipate that overall, on the southwest border, [active-duty personnel] will provide real-time situational awareness of persons, vehicles, vessels and aircraft; and they’ll work with [U.S. Customs and Border Protection] on operator-level maintenance, movement and staging of [CBP] assets,” Acting Secretary of Defense Robert Salesses said. 

    READ MORE: Video: 1,500 US troops deployed to southern border

    Salesses explained that the Department of Defense is planning to “develop and execute additional missions” in coordination with the Department of Homeland Security, other federal agencies, and state partners to “address the full range of threats outlined by the [president] at our nation’s borders.”

    In addition to the video shared by the White House on Friday, Bill Melugin, a Fox News correspondent, shared pictures on social media of the Marine Corps at the southern border.

    “Photos of US Marines deployed to the border & assisting Border Patrol, per senior admin official,” the Fox News correspondent tweeted. Per NORTHCOM, the Marines are from the 1st Combat Engineer Battalion, 1st Marine Division, & the 7th Combat Engineer Battalion, 1st Marine Logistics Group. Both Camp Pendleton.”


    Source: American Military News

  • Democrat official arrested for alleged child sex crimes

    The United States Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida announced last Friday that Orange County Democratic Party Treasurer Matthew A. Inman had been arrested and charged with the transportation of child sex abuse material.

    A press release by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida revealed that 39-year-old Inman currently faces a minimum of 5 years and a maximum of 20 years in federal prison if he is convicted on the charges of transporting child sex abuse material.

    The press release noted that the 39-year-old Democratic treasurer received and saved multiple videos of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) to his phone between August and October of 2024. Law enforcement officials confirmed that the videos featured “adults sexually assaulting young children.”

    According to the United States Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, Inman traveled to Las Vegas in October of 2024 and started engaging in an online conversation with an undercover law enforcement officer pretending to be the father of a 9-year-old male minor.

    READ MORE: Anti-Trump cartoonist arrested on child exploitation material charges

    “During this conversation, Inman expressed interest in meeting and sexually assaulting the purported child,” the press release stated. “He also sent CSAM videos to the undercover officer.”

    After obtaining a search warrant for the Democratic treasurer’s residence and electronic devices, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) executed a search of Inman’s house. During the search, Inman tried deleting evidence from his phone and attempted to hide in the attic of his house, according to the press release.

    The Post Millennial reported that in addition to serving as a Democratic treasurer, Inman served as the president of the Orange County Rainbow Democrats LGBTQ group, has expressed negative opinions of President Donald Trump on social media, and has advocated for transgenderism.

    Pictures shared on X, formerly Twitter, by Post Millennial editor Andy Ngo shows Inman alongside some of his anti-Trump and pro-LGBTQ social media posts.

    Following the charges against Inman, the Orange County Democratic Party released a statement on Facebook, saying, “We are deeply appalled and horrified by the news that Matthew Inman has been arrested on charges of sexual abuse involving a minor. We unequivocally condemn child sexual abuse in the strongest possible terms and hope that any victims involved receive the support and resources they need moving forward.”

    The Orange County Democratic Party added, “After learning of the allegations against Mr. Inman, the Orange County Democratic Party acted swiftly to suspend him from all voluntary roles and responsibilities.”


    Source: American Military News

  • Barry Michael Cooper, writer-producer known for ‘New Jack City’ and ‘Above the Rim,’ dies at 66

    Barry Michael Cooper, an investigative reporter-turned-screenwriter known for the films “New Jack City,” “Above the Rim” and “Sugar Hill,” has died.

    Cooper died Tuesday, a spokesperson for the Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner confirmed to The Times. Additional details about his death, including a cause of death, were not immediately available. He was 66.

    Matthew J. Cooper, the screenwriter’s son, shared news of his father’s death on social media Thursday. On Instagram the junior Cooper lauded his father as an “author of compassion,” an “icon” and a “super hero.”

    “[He] single handedly shifted an entire culture. Was a quiet legend but now the whole world knows your greatness. Admired [by] many. Understood by very few,” Matthew Cooper wrote with a photo of himself hugging his dad. “Proud of you then. Proud of you now. Will never be another.”

    Writer Nelson George, one of Barry Cooper’s journalist peers, mourned the screenwriter’s death on Substack. “Barry helped define pop culture in the ’80s and ’90s,” George wrote Wednesday, citing Cooper’s in-depth reporting on music and the crack epidemic.

    “Though he lived much of the last decades of his life in Baltimore, he was Harlem to his core,” George added.

    Cooper’s writing career began in the 1980s when he served as a music critic for the Village Voice, the storied and Pulitzer Prize-winning New York alt-weekly. As a journalist the Harlem native gained notoriety for articles including “Teddy Riley’s New Jack Swing” and the 1987 cover story “Kids Killing Kids: New Jack City Eats Its Young.” The second, which described Detroit’s violent drug-trade scene in gory detail, would later propel Cooper into the orbit of Hollywood and serve as the basis of his “Harlem trilogy.”

    “Two weeks later I was on a first-class flight to Hollywood to meet with Quincy Jones. My head was huge,” Cooper told the Voice in 2007.

    Jones, the late and legendary starmaker, tasked Cooper with rewriting a screenplay about 1970s drug lord Nicky Barnes. Cooper’s version of the script, co-written by Thomas Lee Wright, eventually evolved into the 1991 film “New Jack City,” directed by Mario Van Peebles. The film starred Peebles, Wesley Snipes, Ice-T, Allen Payne and Chris Rock.

    “New Jack City” grossed nearly $50 million at the domestic box office and helped set the stage for more films about inner-city life featuring rappers in lead roles, Times critic Mikael Wood observed in 2023. Cooper’s film debut also laid the foundation for the next entries in his trilogy.

    Cooper and Snipes would later reunite for 1994’s “Sugar Hill,” which starred the latter as a drug dealer seeking to escape the violent lifestyle. Directed by Leon Ichaso, “Sugar Hill” also starred Michael Wright, Theresa Randle and Clarence Williams III.

    “Above the Rim,” Cooper’s third film, premiered in 1994 and starred Duane Martin, Leon, Tonya Pinkins, Bernie Mac and even secured rapper Tupac Shakur amid the height of his popularity. The movie, directed by “Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” co-creator Jeff Pollack, centered on an aspiring basketball star played by Martin.

    In the years after his Harlem trilogy, Cooper’s output seemingly came to a screeching halt. “I got so high on myself that I turned down jobs,” he told the Voice in 2007, adding that he faced trouble with the law and struggled to find work.

    He resumed his career in 2005 as a writer, producer and director for the web series “Blood on the Walls$,” which reunited him with “Sugar Hill” star Wright. The series followed a once-in-demand Hollywood producer. Additionally in the 2010s, Cooper worked on the short “Guilt…” and was a co-writer on the video game “NBA 2K16,” according to IMDb.

    Cooper returned to mainstream Hollywood when he joined Netflix’s “She’s Gotta Have It,” a 2017 TV reboot based on director Spike Lee’s 1986 film debut. The series, created by Lee, starred DeWanda Wise, Anthony Ramos, Lyriq Bent and Cleo Anthony. The show’s two seasons are still available to stream on Netflix. Cooper wrote three episodes and was part of the producing team.

    “Until next time. Harlem’s finest,” Cooper’s son concluded in his Instagram tribute.

    ___

    © 2025 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Dr. Fauci’s security detail revoked by Trump

    President Donald Trump confirmed on Friday that he has revoked the security detail for Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

    On Friday, CNN reported that the 47th president revoked Fauci’s security detail on Thursday night, citing a source familiar with the president’s decision. The anonymous source told CNN that in light of potential threats due to Fauci’s leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic, Fauci has hired his own private security detail following the president’s termination of his federally-funded security detail.

    During Trump’s visit on Friday to Asheville, North Carolina, as part of a tour of the region devastated by Hurricane Helene, the president was asked about his decision to revoke Fauci’s security, which had been funded by the National Institutes of Health, according to CNN.

    “I think, you know, when you work for government, at some point your security detail comes off and, you know, you can’t have them forever,” Trump said. “I think it’s very standard. If it would be for somebody else, you wouldn’t be asking the question.”

    READ MORE: Trump revokes security for top fmr. officials: Report

    Trump added, “We took some off other people, too, but you can’t have a security detail for the rest of your life because you worked for government.”

    In response to Trump’s explanation, a reporter asked if the president would feel “partially responsible” if anything were to happen to Fauci or John Bolton, a former national security adviser who also had his security detail revoked by Trump this week.

    “No. You know, they all made a lot of money. They can hire their own security too,” Trump said. “All the people you’re talking about, they can go out, I can give them some good numbers of very good security people. They can hire their own security. They all made a lot of money. Fauci made a lot of money. They all did.”

    The president added, “Certainly I would not take responsibility.”

    In addition to revoking Fauci’s security detail, Trump also revoked the security details for former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs Brian Hook this week.


    Source: American Military News

  • ‘Deportation flights have begun,’ officials say

    The Trump administration confirmed Friday morning that “deportation flights have begun,” fulfilling one of President Donald Trump’s major campaign promises to the American people.

    In a post on X, formerly Twitter, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt shared pictures that appear to show illegal immigrants boarding a U.S. military aircraft.

    “Deportation flights have begun,” Leavitt tweeted. “President Trump is sending a strong and clear message to the entire world: if you illegally enter the United States of America, you will face severe consequences.”

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection sources told Fox News that one of the pictures shared by the White House press secretary was taken at the Biggs Army Airfield, which is located at Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection sources also told the outlet that the military aircraft can hold 80 people and departed at roughly 5 p.m. local time for Guatemala.

    On Thursday night, Leavitt announced, “The Trump Administration arrested 538 illegal immigrant criminals including a suspected terrorist, four members of the Tren de Aragua gang, and several illegals convicted of sex crimes against minors.”

    Fox News reported that prior to Thursday’s 538 illegal immigrant criminal arrests confirmed by the Trump administration, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had already made roughly 460 arrests in the first couple days following Trump’s inauguration.

    READ MORE: Viral Video: Illegal immigrant thanks Biden, Obama, insults Trump during ICE arrest

    In a follow-up post on social media, Leavitt added, “The Trump Administration also deported hundreds of illegal immigrant criminals via military aircraft. The largest massive deportation operation in history is well underway. Promises made. Promises kept.”

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection told Fox News that in addition to the deportation of illegal immigrants, U.S. military troops have already started constructing wire barriers at the Ysleta Port of Entry, which is located in El Paso.


    Source: American Military News

  • Trump orders declassification of JFK, RFK and MLK files

    President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday ordering the declassification of the government’s files on the assassinations of former President John F. Kennedy, former Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

    In a video shared on X, formerly Twitter, Trump can be signing executive orders in the Oval Office at the White House on Thursday. After a Trump aide explained that the final executive order for the president to sign was regarding the declassification of the highly-anticipated assassination files, Trump said, “That’s a big one. A lot of people were waiting for this for years, for decades, and everything will be revealed.”

    Immediately after signing the executive order on Thursday, Trump instructed his staff to give the pen he used to sign the historic order to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who endorsed him during the 2024 presidential election and has been nominated by Trump to lead the Department of Health and Human Services.

    Handing the pen to his aide, Trump said, “Give that to RFK Jr.”

    Fox News reported that Trump promised the American people during the 2024 presidential campaign to release the classified files regarding the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr. The president’s promise came after he had pledged to release the John F. Kennedy assassination files during his first administration but later blocked the release of hundreds of records pertaining to the assassination.

    According to Fox News, Trump indicated at the time that the potential harm to the country’s national security, foreign affairs, and law enforcement activities that could be caused by the release of the files was “of such gravity that it outweighs the public interest in immediate disclosure.”

    However, in Trump’s executive order on Thursday, the president wrote, “I have now determined that the continued redaction and withholding of information from records pertaining to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy is not consistent with the public interest and the release of these records is long overdue.”

    READ MORE: Trump revokes security for top fmr. officials: Report

    Trump added, “And although no Act of Congress directs the release of information pertaining to the assassinations of Senator Robert F. Kennedy and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., I have determined that the release of all records in the Federal Government’s possession pertaining to each of those assassinations is also in the public interest.”

    Asked about Trump’s decision to declassify the assassination files, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told reporters, “I think it’s a great move because we need to have more transparency in our government, and he’s keeping his promise to have the government tell the truth to the American people about everything.”


    Source: American Military News

  • John Sykes, guitarist and hair-metal hitmaker with Whitesnake, dies at 65

    Guitarist John Sykes, who played with the rock bands Whitesnake and Thin Lizzy, has died at 65. He helped compose one of the defining power ballads of the late-1980s hair-metal scene in “Is This Love,” which drove sales of Whitesnake’s self-titled 1987 LP to sales of more than 8 million copies in the United States.

    His death was announced in a statement on his website, which said he died “after a hard fought battle with cancer.” The statement didn’t say when or where he died.

    Sykes joined Whitesnake in 1984 when the band’s frontman, former Deep Purple vocalist David Coverdale, asked him to replace founding guitarist Micky Moody while the British band was on tour behind that year’s “Slide It In.” That album, Whitesnake’s sixth studio LP, broke the group in the U.S., and Sykes went on to collaborate closely with Coverdale for “Whitesnake,” co-writing most of the album’s songs; the album peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 (behind Michael Jackson’s “Bad”) and spawned MTV staples “Here I Go Again” — whose music video starred Coverdale’s future wife, model and actor Tawny Kitaen, writhing atop two parked Jaguars — as well as “Still of the Night” and the yearning “Is This Love,” which hit No. 2 on the Hot 100.

    Yet those iconic videos don’t feature Sykes, as Coverdale had fired the guitarist before the “Whitesnake” album was released — a dismissal Sykes said he found out about from the band’s A&R rep.

    “David said nothing to any of us about having decided to kick us out of the band,” Sykes told Rock Candy magazine in 2017. “I was furious and wasn’t about to accept this. So I went down to the studio where David was still recording his vocals, prepared to confront him. Honest to God, he ran away, got in his car and hid from me!”

    In 2023, Coverdale told Metal Edge that “things went squirrely” between him and Sykes and that “no matter how incredible of an album that we made together, we were unable to connect as people.”

    Sykes was born in Reading, England, in 1959 and started playing guitar as a teenager. He performed with the bands Streetfighter and Tygers of Pan Tang before joining a latter-day version of Thin Lizzy, which had scored a top-20 pop hit in 1976 with “The Boys Are Back in Town.” Sykes played on 1983’s “Thunder and Lightning,” Thin Lizzy’s final studio album before founder Phil Lynott died in 1986.

    After Whitesnake, Sykes formed the group Blue Murder with drummer Carmine Appice of Vanilla Fudge, then launched a solo career; he also toured with a Lynott-less incarnation of Thin Lizzy.

    Information on survivors wasn’t immediately available.

    ___

    © 2025 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News