Iraq Says Shared Intel That France, US, Iran Were Targets
The comments came after 129 people were killed in Paris on Friday by gunmen and suicide bombers in an attack claimed by Islamic State.
Obama In Turkey For Summit Overshadowed By Paris Attacks
Washington already expects France to retaliate by taking on a larger role in the U.S.-led coalition’s bombing campaign against Islamic State.
Costa Rica Lets Cuban Migrants Enter Panama; Many Hope To Enter US
The improvement in U.S.-Cuba relations has many Cubans fearing they will lose their preferential status in U.S. immigration policy.
Summer Olympics 2016: Russia Plans To Reform Before Rio Games
Russia has set out a three-month road map to clean up its act, after reports of a state-sponsored doping.
Jordan Says Mass Killer Was Not Jihadist But Mentally Disturbed
Anwar Abu Zeid, a police officer, was allegedly under severe mental stress at the time he killed five people, including two American police trainers.
Tycoons, Telecoms And Trotsky: New Book Sheds Light On Billionaire Businessman Carlos Slim
So how did Carlos Slim become the world's richest man in a country where almost one-half the population lives in poverty?
Cruz, Huckabee Urge Stricter Limits On Syrian Refugees
The Republican candidates criticized U.S. plans to increase to 10,000 the number of Syrian refugees accepted in the United States during fiscal year 2016.
At Least 10 Killed As Train Derails In Eastern France
All those aboard the train, which was being tested, were employees of the SNCF national railways.
Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Says Country Must Defend Its Sovereignty In South China Sea Dispute
"If our country is threatened or being encroached, we Malaysians should rise to defend our country," Malaysia's deputy prime minister says.
France To Go Ahead With Climate Change Summit: Source
The French government plans to go ahead with a climate change summit it is due to host at the end of the month.
Sports Competitions In Paris Region Suspended In Wake Of Attacks
All sports competitions in the Paris region have been suspended in the wake of Friday's deadly attacks in the French capital.
Dozens Of Afghan Troops Defect To Taliban In Helmand Fighting
At least 65 Afghan soldiers have defected to the Taliban, taking their weapons and equipment with them.
Trump Surges Among Likely Republican Voters: Poll
The Republican presidential candidate has seen support rise 17 percentage points since Nov. 6, a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed.
Health Fears Grow As Meds Run Out In Syria: Health Officials
Typhoid and diarrhea are on the rise due to a lack of clean water and winter will likely bring acute respiratory infections, the World Health Organization said.
US Military Aid To Egypt Likely To Continue Amid Rights Concerns
Egypt's 2016 aid package is expected to include $1.3 billion in military aid and $150 million in economic assistance.
Ahead Of Pope Visit, More Killed In Central African Republic
Pope Francis has already hinted that his trip, scheduled for Nov. 28 and 29, could be canceled if the attacks worsen.
Russia's Putin, Venezuela's Maduro Discuss Energy Ties
The men agreed to meet Nov. 23 at a summit of gas-exporting countries in Tehran, Iran.
China's Yuan Moves Closer To IMF's Currency Basket
The International Monetary Fund's board could decide Nov. 30 whether to place the currency on a par with the U.S. dollar, Japanese yen, British pound and euro.
Weak US Retail Sales Suggest Moderate Q4 Economic Growth
Other data on Friday showed a second straight monthly decline in producer prices as the cost of services fell.
Alabama To Change Voter Registration System After US Probe
The Justice Department's civil rights division "found widespread noncompliance" with the 1993 National Voter Registration Act.
Investors Face Quagmire Of Falling Earnings, Higher Rates
A Fed rate hike in December could mark an unprecedented conflict between a tightening cycle starting at the same time as earnings fall into recession.
Hired-Gun Hacking Linked To JP Morgan, Fidelity Breaches
Law enforcement and computer security officials say outsourced cyber-crime services are most readily found on underground Russian-language computer forums.
Wall Street Drops, Posts Worst Week Since August
The three major U.S. indexes ended the week down more than 3 percent, firmly putting the brakes on a fast rally that began in October.
Wall St. Lower On Fears Of Retail Slowdown; Cisco Drags
Dow component Cisco fell 5.6 percent to $26.27 after it gave a weak forecast, citing a slowdown in order growth and weak spending outside the United States.
Texas Tries To Stitch Safety Net Without Planned Parenthood
But the state still has a long way to go before it can match the level of service it had when Planned Parenthood had a role, some health experts say.
Blackstone To Buy $3B In Property Fund Stakes From Calpers
The deal would allow the California Public Employees' Retirement System to sell 43 of its international and domestic funds to Blackstone.
Amazon May Export Delivery Lessons Learned In India
Customers in the United States, Mexico and Brazil could soon benefit from logistical innovations developed in India's crowded cities.
Bloomingdale's 'Spiked Eggnog' Ad Sparks Outrage
A large majority of the comments on social media have labeled the ad as "creepy."
Asian Shares Skid As Commodities Drop
"Data from China ... is showing no sign that growth might be picking up," said Masahiro Ichikawa, senior strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management.
Partial Victory For Penn State's Sandusky In Bid For Child-Sex Retrial
A judge ordered Pennsylvania's attorney general to surrender any evidence showing the former coach's victims might have had financial incentives to alter testimony.