Abandoned by the West, Libyans Vote with Little Hope
Three years after the fall of Muammar Gaddafi, Libyans have little reason to be optimistic.
Three years after the fall of Muammar Gaddafi, Libyans have little reason to be optimistic.
The German leader seems willing to meet French and Italian demands.
The “third arrow” of the Japanese prime minster’s economic reform program underwhelms.
An international effort to dismantle Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal draws to a close, but Assad could still have poison gasses.
Geert Wilders calls a deal with the Polish Congress of the New Right “a bridge too far.”
Radical Islamists consolidate their gains in the north of Iraq while the army abandons its border posts.
Italy’s two largest conservative parties support the prime minister’s plan to weaken the Senate.
Boyko Borisov says construction of the Russian pipeline will only go ahead if it complies with EU law.
With China seeking oil to fuel its economy, the Canadians can’t wait for America to make up its mind.
The UKIP leader cobbles together just enough allies to maintain his bloc in the European Parliament.
Rather than seeking rapprochement with Sunnis, Iraq’s Shia prime minister is relying heavier on his own sect.
Ukraine must either leave its own citizens in the cold or antagonize its new European friends.
Aggression in the East and South China Seas need not be part of a plan to push the Americans out.
A survey shows supporters of both major parties in America have become more radical in their views.
Senators “suspend themselves” from Matteo Renzi’s party.