-
Suicide attack kills 2 at Pakistani police station
Police in northwest Pakistan say that a suicide car bomber has killed at least two security officials.
-
Iraq: US agrees to limited Iraqi jurisdiction
American troops could face trial before Iraqi courts for major crimes committed off base and when not on missions, under a draft security pact hammered out in months of tortuous negotiations, Iraqi officials familiar with the accord said Wednesday.
-
Iranian reformers wonder if Khatami can rise again
It all seemed like the stirrings of a major political challenge to Iran's firebrand President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: schoolchildren serenaded the popular reformist leader he replaced and a hometown audience chanted Wednesday: "Our next president."
-
EU, US call for a global summit to reshape banking
The Group of Eight major industrial nations announced Wednesday they will hold a global summit - perhaps as early as November in New York - to forge common action to prevent another economic meltdown.
-
What Crisis? Kremlin downplays financial woes
Talking to Russians on the street, you'd be forgiven for thinking there was no economic crisis.
-
Crisis bodes ill for climate change talks
The global financial crisis could hardly come at a worse time for nations seeking a new agreement on climate change that - on top of everything else - will cost tens of billions more dollars.
-
5,800 Chinese babies hospitalized on tainted milk
Nearly 6,000 Chinese babies remain hospitalized with kidney problems resulting from milk powder adulterated with the industrial chemical melamine, the Health Ministry said.
-
North Korea threatens to break off ties with South
North Korea threatened Thursday to break off all relations with South Korea if its new conservative government continues what the North called a policy of reckless confrontation with the communist nation.
-
Deadly fighting erupts at Thai-Cambodian border
Escalating tensions between Thailand and Cambodia over a disputed border near a historic temple erupted Wednesday in a deadly gunbattle, prompting officials to quickly declare that they would resolve the dispute through talks, not bullets.
-
US military: No. 2 al-Qaida in Iraq leader killed
American soldiers killed the alleged No. 2 leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, a Moroccan who trained in Afghanistan, recruited foreign fighters and ran operations in northern Iraq where Sunni insurgents remain a potent threat, the U.S. military said Wednesday.































STORIES
VIDEOS
SLIDESHOWS



