European Union finance ministers were considering at least four options at a meeting in Milan Saturday.
The discovery of coca plants in Mexico hints at a big shift in Mexican cocaine operations, but don’t count on major changes soon.
Authorities are unsure whether there was more than one shooter responsible for killing a Pennsylvania state trooper and wounding another.
Many of the Muslim Brotherhood's exiled leaders have taken refuge in countries sympathetic to its cause, such as Qatar and Turkey.
Arseniy Yatsenyuk made the comment after Europe decided to implement new sanctions against Russia over Ukraine.
Locals have discarded aid and food supplies dropped by the Indian Army and accuse the government of not going enough.
EV- D68 has been confirmed in more than a dozen children in New York state, said the health department.
Dzokhar Tsarnaev had said that the mastermind behind the Boston attack was his brother Tamerlan, who had also planned to attack Times Square.
A senior Boko Haram commander was reportedly killed in a the fighting in Konduga town, about 22 miles southeast of Maiduguri.
Despite denials that Russian troops are in Ukraine, families with children in the Russian military are coping with 'mysterious' deaths.
The slain journalist's parents said they collected money for a ransom payment, despite the threat of prosecution, which authorities deny.
Ten years ago, 170,000 people in the Russian Federation had human immunodeficiency virus. The estimated number now is 1.2 million.
The soldiers, belonging to Unit 8200, said in a letter that it was their “moral duty” to refuse to serve in the intelligence unit.
Islamic State's Twitter users, which have trumpeted the group's violent acts and world view on the social media service, have gone quiet in past days.
A man posing as a worker at an animal testing laboratory in Germany filmed secret footage of monkeys being experimented on.
Obama will use airstrikes against ISIS. The U.S. also pledged hundreds of millions of dollars to help refugees and the nations taking them in.
Al Qaeda's assaults on Sept. 11, 2001, led to all manner of weird and wacky theories, suggesting the U.S. abetted the terrorists.
The challenge for Washington? This is not the only U.S.-backed rebel group with shifty allegiances.
It turns out the U.S. Air Force has a program called ISIS, which stands for Integrated Sensor is Structure. Now what?
ISIS is scarily good at assembling an arsenal using weapons it stole or captured.
Facing criticism and an ethics complaint, N.J. officials cite a pension investment return rate suddenly higher than they previously reported.
The economic future of an independent Scotland will depend on what happens to its currency, which is still unclear.
Cross-dressing performers are asking Facebook not to discriminate, but the real issue is money.
As Islamist militants fight for Benghazi, Libya moves closer to becoming a place where people with radical agendas are at home.
ISIS has abducted between 1,500 and 4,000 women and children from Iraq’s Yazidi community, the U.S. State Department says.
Americans need to be more protective of their right to privacy, Sotomayor said.
Embattled Toronto Mayor Rob Ford cited health reasons for his exit.
The president’s visit to Baltimore isn’t entirely about campaigning. Obama is also set to tour Fort McHenry.
The newest food safety scandal regarding Chinese oil has reached Taiwan, China, Hong Kong and even the U.S.
Chilean judges haven't invoked the law since 1998, but repealing it would be a landmark human rights move nonetheless.