Cuba returned the dummy Hellfire missile after its manufacturer mistakenly shipped it to the island in 2014.
France will stick to its pledge to accept 30,000 of the 160,000 refugees European countries have agreed to allow, but it will not take in more.
Dozens of businesses with models rooted in the sharing economy are seeking changes in the way they are regulated by the European Union and its member states.
The movie star is supportive of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s approach to handling the flow of asylum seekers.
An EU report had said that Greece neglected its obligations to control the external frontier of the passport-free Schengen zone, and could stand to lose its privileges.
Greece, the main gateway to Europe for more than a million refugees and migrants last year, has been overwhelmed by the influx.
Markets are likely to view the growth as unsatisfactory, considering the economy had the advantage of cheap energy, an export-boosting drop in currency and monetary stimulus.
Central banks are resorting to negative interest rates to stimulate growth — Fed Chair Janet Yellen is considering them — but they are not as effective as investors had hoped.
Ursula Haverbeck was sentenced last year to serve 10 months in jail for denying the Holocaust happened.
The NATO ships will conduct “reconnaissance, monitoring and surveillance” in the region that has, over the past year, become a hotbed of human trafficking.
The rumor mill is abuzz that scientists may finally have discovered gravitational waves. Here's what you need to know before Thursday's big announcement.
The company also signaled that it may miss its profitability target for 2016 due to uncertain economic conditions.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said Wednesday that it has stepped up humanitarian aid in the Syrian province.
Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen increase the number of automakers and brands affected by history’s most complicated auto safety recall.
Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Poland could all see an addition of up to 1,000 troops, as NATO attempts to deter Russian aggression in the region.
Deutsche Bank shares have recovered some ground after hitting 30-year lows. But concern about the health of Europe’s banks is growing.
Russia's 2002 application to the U.N. to widen its control of the polar region was rejected, but now the Kremlin is trying again.
The turn underscores the volatility of world markets and concerns about slowing global growth.
Violence against areas where asylum-seekers have been staying spiked in 2015.
Japan government bond yields turned negative on Tuesday, underscoring risk aversion, following drops in U.S. stocks.
European Union members are facing a controversy over the proposed construction of a natural gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea and the potential effects on the region.
Banks in the U.S. are examining ways to cut expenses even more, as market turmoil have sent the sector’s shares down.