Iran Is Scared of America’s Hardliners on Nuclear Issue
Iranians have voted out opponents of the nuclear deal. But they're still worried the United States won't live up to its side of the bargain.
Iranians have voted out opponents of the nuclear deal. But they're still worried the United States won't live up to its side of the bargain.
Tehran says it backs the Syrian cease-fire—but only if it can still hammer “terrorists” the West sees as the valid opposition to Assad.
When the outbreak hit West Africa, fevers spiked—and so did rates of teenage pregnancy.
The university targeted by al-Shabab last year has reopened. Will Kenya's softer, gentler approach to counterterrorism keep it safe?
Tsai Ing-wen looks like she's about to win the upcoming presidential election on Taiwan, and if she does, the one-China idea, so important to Beijing, will have suffered a stunning defeat.
What China's huge water transfer project means for those at both ends of the pipeline.
On the Greek island of Lesbos, thousands of Syrians are arriving each day. But will empathy for an earlier flood of refugees trump the fear of being overrun?
The epidemic has waned, but the virus still threatens the lives of women and children in West Africa.
The Russian president’s intervention in Syria is driven by fear of Islamic extremism among his country’s own Muslim minority. But rather than squelching the threat, it’s poised to make it worse.
For a minority, seeing the island's democracy in action is a transformative experience.
The Obama Administration and the U.N. must ensure that Sri Lanka's reconciliation process is fair and just, rather than leaving the Sri Lankan government to its own devices.
Two thousand young men and women, equipped with 10 weeks of training, have been sent into the streets of Kiev to convince Ukrainians that the days of a corrupt and brutal militsiya are over.