Little Chance of Israeli-Palestinian Peace Deal
With peace negotiations at a standstill, a two-state solution seems farther away than ever.
With peace negotiations at a standstill, a two-state solution seems farther away than ever.
The Southern base of the party is ideologically supreme but can’t win national elections.
Japan plans to forgive the majority of the debt Burma owes it and invest more in the country.
The British prime minister promises voters a “real choice” on Europe in the next election.
The former prime minister renews his alliance with the separatist Northern League.
The president urges Syrians to defend their country against an alien rebellion.
The Israeli prime minister responds to the defection of conservative voters to the right.
The two Sudans agree to set up a buffer in the region where most of their oil is produced.
Saving insurance giant AIG only worked for AIG. The economy as a whole isn’t better off.
A week before his scheduled inauguration, Hugo Chávez remains in hospital in Cuba.
Germany’s neighbors are tired of grid fluctuations and shut themselves off.
Fewer than half of Republican congressmen vote to raise taxes to stave off the “fiscal cliff.”
Drone strikes in Pakistan decrease as Al Qaeda expands its presence in Yemen.
Lawmakers avoid an immediate tax hike but achieve no long term fiscal consolidation.
It’s hard to be optimistic when central bankers are spending like drunken sailors.