While coalition members have agreed to the outline of Plan B — to be implemented if the ceasefire fails — the White House has yet to approve a list of specific weapons systems.
South Korea and the United States are in talks to install the missile system in the Korean Peninsula to counter threats from North Korea.
The lawsuit was filed by Sun Wenlin and Hu Mingliang after a civil affairs bureau refused to issue the couple a marriage registration certificate.
China has also deployed a YJ-62 subsonic anti-ship cruise missile on Woody Island in the South China Sea.
While economic worries are a major issue, security concerns — given North Korea’s recent provocations — could help the incumbent party increase its support base.
Pyongyang may also be preparing to launch a mobile ballistic missile, which could reach the U.S., according to a report.
Deportations from Greece began under the new deal last week, but stalled after a surge in last-minute asylum applications.
Brazil’s embattled leader said her vice president was orchestrating a move to topple her.
While the Islamic State group has focused on attacks in Europe, its numbers have decreased in Syria and Iraq, the U.S. says.
Many analysts say that Pyongyang believes convincing the world, and its own people, of its nuclear prowess is as important as the prowess itself.
If Europe were to end its visa waiver program with the United States, tourism, business and trade would see a significant slump.
The targeted killing of a Fatah leader could escalate hostilities in Lebanon’s Palestinian refugee camps.
After decades of low growth and near deflation, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government is planning new public works initiatives and tax incentives to juice the economy.
Leaders of South Africa’s ruling ANC party in Gauteng province have all but urged President Jacob Zuma to resign over the Nkandla scandal.
Global oil prices rallied after a report that top producers Russia and Saudi Arabia agreed to freeze output ahead of a much-anticipated meeting.
The military conducted the vast operation with Cameroonian troops from the Multinational Joint Task Force, whose mandate is to end Boko Haram’s brutal insurgency.
The arrests coincided with prosecutors' announcement that they'd charged two people in connection with last month's bombings in Brussels.
For Syrians who have suffered through more than five years of war, a ceasefire means a lower body count, but not a break from mounting casualties.
Only 13 percent of respondents to a recent survey said they’d support the Islamic State group even if it became less violent.
Officials from more than a dozen OPEC and non-OPEC nations will meet next Sunday in Doha, Qatar, to discuss a strategy to boost oil prices.
The ratings agency cited “major negative implications” of the drop in global oil prices as a reason for downgrading the oil-rich nation’s sovereign credit rating.
Pyongyang published a letter aping the late American president, invoking the Emancipation Proclamation and the famous Gettysburg Address.
Taiwan's Foreign Ministry said Kenyan police carrying assault rifles threw tear gas to force its citizens onto a China-bound plane.
GPS jamming is illegal in the U.S., the U.K. and most of continental Europe.
The extremist group has increasingly relied on its army of child soldiers as it has lost land in its stronghold in northeastern Nigeria, a new report has found.
India reportedly delayed the agreement over concerns that it could turn into a military alliance with the U.S., undermining its traditional autonomy.
If the proposal — to be unveiled Tuesday by the European Union — is approved, it will force companies to provide a country-by-country breakdown of profits and taxes.
The companies that have signed up to fight terror online include Baidu, Tencent and Alibaba Group, according to the Cyberspace Administration of China.
The EU antitrust authority had previously expressed concerns that the deal may reduce competition and innovation.
It was not clear when and where the two men, reportedly brothers, were detained by Belgian officials.