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A lack of U.S. coordination, compounded by Afghan foot-dragging, has stymied efforts to track the billions of aid dollars poured into Afghanistan, an audit shows.
Indian police are focusing on a domestic terror outfit as they search for suspects in last week's blasts in India's financial capital, which killed 20 and injured 131, said a senior investigator.
U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron faced a barrage of accusations over his relationship with News Corp. and his former senior aide Andy Coulson, a key figure in the phone-hacking scandal.
Iran's crude oil supplies to India rose by 14% in June despite a dispute over $5 billion of unpaid bills, a person familiar with the matter said Wednesday.
President Obama, in a last-ditch bid for a bipartisan "grand bargain" on the budget, threw his weight behind a $3.7 trillion deficit-reduction plan unveiled by six Republican and Democratic senators.
Indian shares reversed early gains to close lower Wednesday, as weak results from software exporter Wipro and drug maker Dr. Reddy's Laboratories raised concerns over the earnings outlook for other companies.
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American Airlines parent AMR plans to split a 460-plane order between Airbus and Boeing. It is the largest single aircraft order to date.
India's oil ministry has asked the country's finance ministry for a cash subsidy of 290 billion rupees ($6.51 billion) to help state-run fuel retailers trim losses on discounted fuel sales for the April-June quarter, a senior oil ministry official said.
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Tourism in India grew significantly in 2010. While Andhra Pradesh attracted the highest number of domestic tourists, Maharashtra attracted the highest number of foreign ones. In pictures.
Laborers build a stage in Kolkata, a leopard prepares to pounce on a forest guard, Hillary Clinton with Sonia Gandhi and more.
China plans an ultradeep dive by a manned submersible beneath the Pacific that would propel it past the U.S. in a race to explore potentially vast mineral resources.
Since Steve Jobs went on medical leave, members of Apple's board have discussed CEO succession with executive recruiters and at least one head of a high-profile tech company.
When U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa on her visit to Chennai Wednesday, a good question to ask would have been how the state's students manage to study without textbooks.
To be taken seriously as a major power, India must show that it has influence in its own backyard.
Big business has been viewed with suspicion in agriculture but it may be what India needs for its next 'Green Revolution,' says Adarsh Kumar.
The cricket bat that India's captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni used to hit the winning six in the April 2 World Cup final sold for an eye-watering $160,570 at an auction in London on Monday night.
China offered new details of a bloody battle in its restive Xinjiang region this week, with state media saying police shot dead 14 rioters in the clash and a local government website publishing the first photographs of the incident.
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Shares of real-estate website Zillow more than doubled, giving the unprofitable Internet company a valuation of more than $1 billion.
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Demand for subdivided flats has surged in the last few years as record-high home prices have squeezed low-income families into smaller quarters. But the crowding is posing public-safety and other risks.
Banks such as Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and J.P. Morgan are weighing bids, while other lenders are looking to finance offers from private-equity firms.
Asian markets were mostly lower Tuesday as debt jitters in Europe and the U.S. kept investors cautious while utilities and exporters dragged the Tokyo market lower. But Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index bounced off early declines to gain 0.5%.
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Apple's new Lion operating system is a giant step in the merger of the personal computer and post-PC devices like tablets and smartphones, says Walt Mossberg.
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Beijing's fretfulness about change has caused another good idea to struggle to get off the ground.
As large expanses of glass have become architecturally acceptable, new technology is making living in a fishbowl more practical.
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Analysis and insights from The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires on the daily news in the world's largest democracy.
Powered by Mint, Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal
Hillary Clinton said Pakistan has an obligation to prosecute the perpetrators of the 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai "transparently, fully and urgently" and expressed the U.S.'s "deep sympathy and outrage" at last week's triple bomb blasts.
Political artist Chittaprosad vividly captured the human cost of the 1943 Bengal famine, a calamity that scarred the last years of British rule in India. His work is now on show in Delhi.
U.S. authorities charged two Pakistani-American men with being unregistered lobbyists on the payroll of Pakistan's spy agency, a move that could add a new issue to the deteriorating relationship between the two allies.
It seem increasingly likely that when foreign ministers from India and Pakistan sit down in Delhi on July 26, the meeting will between 79-year-old S.M. Krishna and 34-year old Hina Rabbani Khar.
Politician-turned-filmmaker Prakash Jha looks at the bitterness around India's broadening of affirmative action in its public universities in his upcoming film.
Kerala should look to Norway for lessons on how a government administration should handle sudden wealth, says Keerthik Sasidharan.
The top business leaders in Asia making headlines last week in select global and regional media. Powered by Dow Jones Factiva and edited for relevance and clarity.
Chinese athletes compete in the World Aquatics Championships in Shanghai, a leopard attacks an Indian forest guard, a Harry Potter exhibition in Sydney, and more.