The president reportedly is prepared to authorize airstrikes in Syria against the Islamic State, without approval from Congress.
The president is expected to make the case that a coalition of forces and targeted airstrikes can defeat ISIS.
The U.N.'s Ban Ki-moon asked President Assad to seek a political solution in Syria, which would help in the fight against ISIS.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was holding meetings just 7 miles from the blast.
Kerry’s visit starts a day after Obama reportedly expressed his readiness for airstrikes against ISIS in Syria without Congressional approval.
Raimondo, the state general treasurer, would become Rhode Island's first female governor.
The president told Congress he didn't need its approval for his strategy to go after the Islamic State.
The president's pensiveness on foreign policy projects weakness, according to critics.
Despite Credit Suisse pleading guilty to felony charges, Obama wants to waive rules so it can keep running pension funds.
NBC’s Sunday-morning news show saw a ratings jump with the debut of Chuck Todd, who grilled President Obama.
The contents of the syringe are not known but the air marshal was flown back to the US where he is now under observation.
Barak Barfi, a spokesperson for the slain journalist's family, also accused the U.S government of making a "number of inaccurate statements."
Some are frustrated by Obama's decision to delay executive action on immigration, but others say that was never a solution anyway.
President Obama is set to lay out his strategy for fighting ISIS in a speech Wednesday. Here's a list of what he might announce.
Russia has pledged to strike back, hinting at a ban of all EU flights over Russian territory.
The attacks reportedly targeted a major Sunni tribe called the Al-Jabour, which has sided with Iraqi forces against Islamic State.
US airstrikes are helping Iraqi ground troops regain territory lost to the Islamic State.
The Arab League endorsed a UNSC resolution calling on states to "act to suppress the flow of foreign fighters, financing and other support to Islamist extremist groups in Iraq and Syria".
ISIS is currently holding about 46 Turkish citizens hostage.
"In some ways, we are solving a non-existent problem because we can't solve the existing ones," a Western defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said as the 28-nation summit ended on Friday.
Obama told NBC's "Meet the Press" that the outbreak, which has killed 2,100 people in African five countries, was unlikely to spread to the United States in the short term.
On "Meet the Press," the president said there's overwhelming support for an offensive. His speech is planned for Wednesday.