Britain is hoping for U.S. support as it begins the complex process of removing itself from the European Union and negotiating new trade deals.
Numerous chances to unmask the Abdeslam brothers before the Paris and Brussels attacks were missed, according to a report to the Belgian Parliament, including evidence they had relationships with other terror suspects, one brother’s possession of Jihadist printed material and the other’s use of the Islamic State flag on his social-media profile.
A Turkish court sentenced two military officials to life in prison in the first ruling related to the mid-July coup attempt, as authorities widened a nationwide crackdown against alleged perpetrators of the failed takeover.
China said its efforts to solve the North Korean nuclear issue “are clear for all to see” after President-elect Donald Trump said in a tweet that the country wasn't doing enough to rein in Pyongyang’s weapons program.
Islamic State claimed responsibility for a deadly New Year’s attack in Istanbul, claiming the operation had targeted Turkey in retaliation for its military operations against the group in Syria.
The gunman who opened fire in an Istanbul nightclub is believed to have dumped his weapon and made his escape by blending in with fleeing partygoers. At least 39 people died in the latest attack to rock a nation battling terrorism on multiple fronts.
Kim Jong Un said his country is finalizing preparations for a test launch of an ICBM, which would mark an advance in its attempt to build a nuclear weapon capable of reaching the U.S.
Dion Nissenbaum, a Wall Street Journal staff reporter detained by Turkish authorities earlier this week, has returned safely to the U.S.
A lone gunman attacked a popular club shortly after midnight on New Year’s, Turkish officials said, marking one of the deadliest terrorist strikes in a country facing multiple threats.
President Tsai Ing-wen played down the significance of a planned U.S. stopover in January en route to Central America amid warnings from Beijing and speculation that she might meet with President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team.
Brazilian police officials said a military police officer has confessed to murdering Greece’s ambassador to Brazil on the day after Christmas at the behest of the diplomat’s wife, who the police said had been having an affair with the officer.
A 2013 article by Russian Gen. Valery Gerasimov emphasized importance of cyberwarfare.
Taiwan’s president will transit through two U.S. cities in January while traveling to Central America, stops that will likely irritate Beijing, which has urged Washington to prevent the island’s leader from landing in the U.S.
The Malaysia government uses an assortment of laws to silence critics of its handling of the multibillion-dollar global scandal over state fund 1MDB, but says it remains tolerant and is enforcing the law.
President Obama issued a dramatic response to Russia’s alleged use of cyberattacks to interfere with the 2016 presidential election, in one of the biggest diplomatic confrontations between Washington and Moscow since the end of the Cold War.
Colombia’s number of confirmed cases of Zika-linked microcephaly is expected to rise sharply in coming months, due in part to the country’s cautious approach to diagnosing the virus.
A fortune teller from Mosul, Iraq, has chosen to keep her visions to herself in the refugee camp she now calls home, concerned about sympathizers of Islamic State.
Brazilian President Michel Temer will veto a bill that would have offered relief to indebted states, a spokesman for his chief of staff said.
France’s two leading presidential candidates oppose sanctions against Moscow, threatening to upend Europe’s strategy for containing Russia’s military assertiveness.
Iran sought the money from every administration since Carter’s. Will Obama’s deal encourage more claims?