Pakistan Moves to Quiet Outcry Against Saudi Arabia Over Hajj Stampede
By SALMAN MASOOD
Scores of Pakistani pilgrims were killed in the disaster, and many families still do not know what happened to their relatives.
Scores of Pakistani pilgrims were killed in the disaster, and many families still do not know what happened to their relatives.
Odel Bennett’s husband was killed along with a rabbi after a Palestinian assailant attacked the family in Jerusalem’s Old City.
Moscow is bombing rebel groups backed by the government in Ankara, and its warplanes have flown into Turkish airspace, undercutting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Senior government officials were not injured in the hotel explosion, but a security official in Aden said at least 18 people were killed in the soldiers’ building.
Gen. John F. Campbell said the hospital was “mistakenly struck,” and said it resulted from “a U.S. decision made within the U.S. chain of command.”
At least 56 people were killed on Monday and wounded dozens.
The five Palestinian militants who were arrested had admitted responsibility for the fatal shooting of an Israeli couple inside their car.
The Times investigated secret casualties of Iraq’s abandoned chemical weapons and the Pentagon’s response, including follow-up care for those exposed.
With Syria facing an uncertain future, Israel is looking at the Golan as a place where it can grow.
Both countries have said they want to defeat terrorist groups like the Islamic State, but in Syria, Russia’s definition of terrorist encompasses some groups that are allies of the United States.
In the latest crisis, tens of thousands are racing to Hungary before a border fence is finished.
In a new video series, Thomas Erdbrink, the Tehran bureau chief for The New York Times, interviews the people of Iran, a country that is slowly changing and where nothing is as it seems.
As Iran and world powers including the United States try to reach a deal on nuclear controls in exchange for the lifting of sanctions, Iranians from all walks of life are watching and hoping for a new start.
A look at the conflict that has dismembered Syria and inflamed the region with one of the world’s worst religious and sectarian wars.
Broadcast to frighten and manipulate, the Islamic State’s flamboyant violence consumes the world’s attention while more familiar threats kill far more people.
Far from taking the United Nations by storm, the Palestinian president’s speech mainly underlined his own political weakness.
If U.N. talks fail, Libya will be torn between two equally disastrous currents: fragmentation or authoritarianism.
A ragtag group of fighters from America and Europe have joined the fight against extremists in Syria. But with little training and no clear leadership, do they know what they’re doing?
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