US Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump yesterday blamed organised “thugs” for protests that shut down his Chicago rally and said the incident had “energised America.”
Donald Trump cancelled a rally in Chicago Friday in the face of huge protests, which triggered scenes of chaos and prompted his presidential rivals to blame the violent outbreak on his incendiary rhetoric.
President Barack Obama made a pilgrimage Friday to SXSW -- the tech world's Davos and Woodstock rolled into one -- making a government recruitment pitch even as he fanned a row over encryption.
Cancer treatment for 91-year-old former US president Jimmy Carter has been so successful that he says he is going to stop receiving it.
The US trade deficit grew more than expected in January as exports fell more sharply than imports amid a slowing global economy, Commerce Department data showed.
At least 13 people, including nine civilians, were killed in a suicide bombing targeting Afghan police which was claimed by Taliban insurgents in a remote area northwest of Kabul.
Thailand is pursuing closer ties — and possible arms deals — with Russia, with relations between Thailand and its traditional partner, the US, cooling in the wake of a May 2014 coup.
Four times as many US troops as originally planned are to take part in a joint military exercise with South Korea next month following nuclear and missile tests by the North, Seoul said yesterday.
A panel of seasoned journalists and political scientists yesterday tackled some of the issues, possible impacts and results of the upcoming US presidential elections on foreign relations with the Middle East including Qatar.
An American judge ordered Apple on Tuesday to help the FBI break into an iPhone belonging to one of the attackers in the San Bernardino shooting that killed 14 people.
The US and Cuba yesterday signed an agreement authorising up to 110 daily US commercial flights to Havana and nine other destinations in the communist island, restoring regular air travel for the first time in more than 50 years.
Britain must renew its submarine-borne Trident nuclear weapons system if it is to maintain its “outsized” role in world affairs, US defence secretary Ash Carter said in comments published yesterday.