Clinton offers more U.S. help as Libya battles militias
NEW YORK - U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton offered Libya more help on Monday as it seeks to rein in militias, stressing that Washington will remain a firm partner despite this month's deadly attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi.
Taiwan boats enter waters disputed by Japan and China
TOKYO - About 40 Taiwan fishing boats and eight Taiwan Coast Guard vessels entered waters that Japan considers its territory on Tuesday, the Japanese Coast Guard said, adding an unpredictable twist to a bitter row between Tokyo and Beijing.
Obama looks to balance U.N. trip and campaign
WASHINGTON - With six weeks until the November 6th election, President Obama traveled to New York seeking to balance a key week of campaigning with a speech at the United Nations General Assembly and his duties as leader of the free world. Full Article
Pakistan's top court struggles to deliver justice
ISLAMABAD - The chief justice of Pakistan's Supreme Court has won acclaim with his activist approach to cases, but the interventions have unleashed a torrent of new claims as his court has become a beacon of hope in a corrupt and dysfunctional justice system. Full Article
China reformist's credentials tested by system
GUANGZHOU, China - Wang Yang, the Communist Party chief of China's southern Guangdong province who is seen by many in the West as a beacon of political change, faces the dilemma that awaits any reformist leader inside China's political system. Full Article
Google shares hit record high
SAN FRANCISCO - Google shares set an all-time high, with the Web giant's reliable advertising business back in vogue among Wall Street investors disenchanted with younger social media companies. Full Article
Venture firms see new promise in life sciences
SAN FRANCISCO - Several venture firms have placed a new focus on life sciences and health, and big drugmakers are using early-stage investing as a proxy for expensive in-house drug development. Full Article
Protesting Ahmadinejad
Sept. 24 - Protesters rally outside President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's New York hotel, voicing their opposition against the Iranian leader's visit to UN. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).
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Romney's campaign into oblivion
A tendency to misspeak during campaigns is something that Mitt Romney arguably inherited from his father. But his failure to capitalize on Obama's weaknesses speaks to far greater problems than a gaffe or two. Commentary
Austerity and the new Spanish poverty
Spain is enduring a slow-motion unraveling of a world that was built after the end of the dictatorship that Spain lived under for nearly 40 years. With 50 percent youth unemployment and 24.6 percent general unemployment there is no hope and no end in sight. Commentary
Banks should learn to say "Just Go"
A stream of scandals, weak activity, tightening regulation and poor shareholder returns mean that this year is a golden opportunity to make radical cuts in banker compensation. Those who complain should be told to pack their bags. Commentary
Why I won't be getting an iPhone 5
Don't get me wrong. I'm not abandoning the iPhone, or any smartphone - at least not yet. But the early-adopter instinct to upgrade to the newest device every year no longer applies. With viable 7-inch tablets starting to appear, this marks the beginning of the end of the smartphone’s dominance over our hearts and minds. Commentary
Banning quote approval sounds good, but can it work?
Many praised the Times’s development of a policy to repel control-freak sources, but it's hard to imagine it making much difference. A Washington Post blogger soon found a loophole, and there are many other ways sources can influence reporters. Commentary
Globalization, the tech revolution and the middle class
We are simultaneously living through a time of positive economic innovation and a time of the painful erosion of the way of life of many middle-class families. Commentary
China's "bamboo ceiling" in politics
Chinese women have been successful in business and other fields, but they are largely absent when it comes to politics, and an upcoming leadership transition looks unlikely to change that. Video
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Beijing Opera: What comes after Hu?
China’s leadership changeover might be the most important political event of the decade. The country’s new rulers will decide not just the fate of the world’s most populous nation, but of its twenty neighbors, large portions of Africa, and its biggest trade partners, Europe and the United States. Download the e-book (PDF format)