The Chinese president is visiting India and Sri Lanka.
Obama is expected to give specifics about his plan to militarily combat Ebola in Africa on Tuesday. Experts say he should have acted sooner.
In an effort to keep Scotland, British political parties are offering "extensive new powers" to the Scottish parliament. Scots aren't buying it.
The revised cost estimate for South Dakota's portion, after four years of waiting for federal approval, is nearly $2 billion.
Qatar denied a claim by Libyan Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni that the country supplied rebel forces with planes and weapons.
The National Health Interview Survey found 3.8 million more people have health care insurance this year compared with 2013.
The warplane was shot down by rebel fighters, a report said, citing an activist group.
Lawmakers in Ukraine also signed an agreement that promises deeper economic and political ties with the European Union.
71-year-old Mohammed Badie, head of the Muslim Brotherhood since 2010, is also facing a death sentence in Egypt.
The soldiers were convicted for revolting against their commanding officer by throwing stones and shooting at him in a May incident.
President Barack Obama is expected to announce the military deployment and $500M in aid for Ebola-affected regions in Africa.
A Taliban suicide bomber reportedly drove a vehicle loaded with explosives into a convoy carrying NATO-led troops.
Dozens of state-run companies have been bleeding cash for decades and kept afloat by budgetary support each year.
Edward Snowden could be granted safe passage in Switzerland if he helped a potential criminal inquiry into U.S. spying there, the Swiss public prosecutor's office said Monday.
Obama's authorization of the use of air power against ISIS in Syria has raised the question of whether Bashar al-Assad would respond in some way.
The U.S. has been carrying out airstrikes against Islamic State since Aug. 8.
The Barack Obama Foundation has selected candidates to host the presidential library, and wants to know what their plans for it are.
Over 3 million consumers, advocates, companies and lawmakers have voiced their opinions on net neutrality.
Oskar Groening, one of the last living former members of the SS, is charged with assisting Nazis in the deaths of 300,000 people in 1944.
Cameron's "hubris" is coming back to bite him in a tight independence ballot that's got his name written all over it.
While the U.S. debates raising minimum wages, its Southern neighbors are doing just that -- but inflation may make their efforts in vain.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Obama's former White House chief of staff, has been vocal about hosting the library.
The increase in the number of refugees dying in boat sinkings is directly related to the outbreak of conflicts in Iraq, Syria and Africa.
Urban Outfitters sparks outrage with its "Vintage Kent State Sweatshirt" that featured blood spatters
The state Department of Treasury is reviewing whether the pension investment violated New Jersey's "pay-to-play" laws.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is taking advantage of chaos in Yemen; U.S. drones and special forces failed to stop it.
With just three days until the Scottish independence referendum, British PM David Cameron pleads with Scots to stay.
Rapid Trident consists of troops from 15 nations, four of which are non-NATO former Soviet states.
France said it was holding off on selling Russia a warship, but then allowed 200 Russian sailors to start sea trials aboard it.
Al Qaeda dismissed as "lies" a U.S. assessment that it is in decline, but a defiant online message issued by the network on Sunday made no mention of the ultra-hardline Islamic State group widely seen as its rival for the leadership of global jihad.