Tens of thousands of Syrians fleeing the conflict in their homeland have descended on Turkey's Aegean coast this summer to board boats to Greece.
The shooter who killed four others and himself at a Washington state high school in October 2014 revealed his state of mind in a text message.
A high profile investment forum will be held on the sidelines of Saudi King Salman’s visit to the United States.
The kidnapped people were workers and engineers at a Turkish construction company.
European and American diplomats want to use sanctions against Russia to make sure the Minsk ceasefire is fully implemented by the end of 2015.
Putin’s foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov said that the Russia president would hold talks with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang.
The former Mississippi State University students had talked to federal agents posing as militants about their desire to help the extremist group in Syria.
Thai police believe that the main suspect is a member of China's Uighur ethnic minority based on travel documents, but have yet to authenticate his passport.
The incident occurred at a five-story residential building in the Goutte d’Or neighborhood in the city's 18th arrondissement.
The program has targeted several high-value ISIS members despite official reservations about the CIA's role in the strikes, according to a Washington Post report.
Former Malaysian premier Mahathir Mohamad wants Prime Minister Razak to step down over corruption allegations.
Roderick Nunley became the sixth inmate in Missouri to be executed with lethal injection this year.
Richard Combs, a white South Carolina police officer, will not serve prison time for fatally shooting a black man in 2011.
Protesters in Nepal's southern plains have been agitating for weeks against plans to divide the small area into several provinces, part of an overhaul envisaged under a federal constitution that politicians are now finalizing.
While the 193-nation assembly overwhelmingly approved the de facto recognition of the sovereign state of Palestine in 2012, a Palestinian attempt to secure full U.N. membership failed.
More than 38 percent of Democrats polled said they would vote for Biden in the Democratic Party nominating contest, if polling indicated that Clinton would lose to a Republican candidate.
The next debate will be held at the Ronald Reagan presidential library in Simi Valley, California.
Passengers on one train were told at one point to be very quiet and listen for the sound of people climbing on the roof.
The GOP has threatened to push for cutting off the group's federal support, perhaps tying that demand to several must-pass tax-and-spending measures.
Efforts in the Indian Ocean should be refocused farther north and closer to the Equator, some scientists say.
It appeared that the suspect had at least one hand in the air when the deputies fired.
Thousands gathered in New York City to protest the Iran nuclear deal, and urge members of Congress to reject it.
The Congress' vote Tuesday could lead to a corruption trial and possibly impeachment for Otto Perez Molina.
Restrictions "imposed by certain Western countries" have not affected Sino-Russian relations, Russia's president said before he visits China on Wednesday.
“It breaks my heart to see what's happening and I know I can help, and I will in any way possible,” a young mother from Keflavik said, as an effort grows to assist Syrians.
The industry trope "blame the intern" no longer works for social media mistakes, as recent gaffes from the Wall Street Journal and Salon confirm.
After more than a decade of war in the Middle East, U.S. tanks are now being painted woodland green as the Russian threat in Europe continues.
A new United Nations report paints a bleak future for the war-torn and impoverished Gaza Strip.
Called a "master strategist of enacting policies," Pope Francis is looking to curb an exodus of Catholics, particularly in Latin America.
With several proposals on the table, Europe continues to struggle for a unified response to the migration crisis.