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A man is seen on a damaged staircase in Homs, May 19, 2013. REUTERS/Yazen Homsy

Hezbollah steps up Syria battle, Israel warns of strikes

AMMAN - Lebanese Hezbollah militants attacked a Syrian rebel-held town alongside Syrian troops and Israel threatened more attacks on Syria to rein the militia in, highlighting the risks of a wider regional conflict if planned peace talks fail.   Full Article  

North Korea fires short-range missiles for two days in a row 1:04pm EDT

SEOUL - North Korea fired a short-range missile from its east coast on Sunday, a day after launching three of these missiles, a South Korean news agency said, ignoring calls for restraint from Western powers. |  Video

Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel (L) and Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey hold a joint news conference at the Pentagon in Washington March 17, 2013.  REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Training fails to halt military sexual assault crisis

WASHINGTON - The U.S. armed forces in recent years rolled out education programs about proper sexual conduct through methods like role playing and video games. But that has failed to prevent a reported 37 percent jump in sexual assault cases in 2012.  Full Article  

Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron speaks at the Conservative Party's annual Spring Forum, in central London March 16, 2013.  REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett

British PM's rift with party core widens

LONDON - British Prime Minister David Cameron is "losing control of his party", Conservative Party grandee Geoffrey Howe said, as a row raged over whether a close aide to Cameron had labeled grassroots activists "mad, swivel-eyed loons".  Full Article  

French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian (C) poses for a picture with French and Malian army officers at the French military base at the airport in Gao, April 26, 2013. REUTERS/Francois Rihouay

After Mali win, France pushes deal with Tuaregs

BAMAKO - After winning adulation across Mali for a five month military offensive that crushed al Qaeda fighters, France is now frustrating some of its allies by pushing for a political settlement with a separate group of Tuareg rebels.  Full Article  

Paraguay's central bank president Jorge Corvalan speaks during an interview for the Reuters Latin America Investment Summit in Asuncion May 30, 2012. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno

Frontier markets booming but risks mounting

NEW YORK - With the world's biggest central banks driving yields on safe assets to near zero, some investors are tossing caution to the wind and rushing to buy illiquid and previously overlooked bonds sold by countries with no capital markets track record.  Full Article  

Algeria's President Abdelaziz Bouteflika waves during a speech to commemorate the 38th anniversary of the nationalization of hydrocarbon resources in Oran February 24, 2009. REUTERS/Louafi Larbi

With president ailing, new era beckons Algeria

ALGIERS - Three weeks after President Abdelaziz Bouteflika was rushed to hospital in Paris, Algeria is preparing for a successor who for the first time will come from a generation too young to have fought in Algeria's war of independence against France.  Full Article  

Afghan President Hamid Karzai speaks during a news conference in Kabul May 4, 2013. REUTERS/Mohammad Ismail

Karzai seeks Indian aid amid border tensions

KABUL - Afghan President Hamid Karzai plans to discuss potential arms deals with Indian officials during a trip to New Delhi this week, officials said, at a time when tensions are running high on Afghanistan's disputed border with Pakistan.  Full Article  

China's Suntech Chief Executive Shi Zhengrong talks to a journalist at Suntech Power Holdings' headquarters in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, June 3, 2009. REUTERS/Stringer

The rise and fall of China's Suntech Power

HONG KONG - Chinese solar-panel maker Suntech Power was once valued in billions of dollars, but now is worth a fraction of that, in part driven by a global race to cash in on alternative energy.  Full Article  

Nicholas Wapshott

Austerity is a moral issue

Europe’s economic turmoil is dragging the world economy down. Despite this destructive display of unnecessary masochism, many Americans still demand that the U.S. sequester be allowed to continue slashing at public spending.  Commentary  

Zachary Karabell

Massive, open, online disruption

Massive, open, online classes are transforming higher education and saving students money. So why are so many administrators and professors scared? Because tech is about to disrupt their industry like it's changed so many others.   Commentary  

Anatole Kaletsky

The radical force of 'Abenomics'

The financial arithmetic of Abenomics means that tolerable stagnation is no longer an option for Japan. Will the radical steps taken by the government be enough to fix the country's economy?  Commentary  

David Rohde

Washington-gate

An increasingly polarized Washington is devouring its own. Ceaseless, take-no-prisoners political warfare, not nefarious White House plots, ravages government.  Commentary  

Jack Shafer

Why the underwear-bomber leak infuriated Obama

It wasn't the substance of the AP story that exasperated the government, but that the AP found a source or sources that spilled information about an ongoing intelligence operation and that even grander leaks might surge into the press corps’ rain barrels.  Commentary  

Yousaf Butt

‘Reset’ on Iran now

Evidence that sanctions are not achieving their purpose should give President Obama political breathing room to have negotiators put serious sanctions relief on the table – which could prove to be in America’s national security interest.  Commentary