Report: Kim Suffering Spasms, But Well Enough To Brush His Teeth
North Korea's leader Kim Jong Il is reportedly still suffering occasional spasms, but the reports say he's recovered enough from a stroke to brush his own teeth.
North Korea's leader Kim Jong Il is reportedly still suffering occasional spasms, but the reports say he's recovered enough from a stroke to brush his own teeth.
Opec oil ministers have decided to curb production by more than a-half million barrels a day.
South Korea's spy agency says North Korea's Kim Jong Il is believed to be recovering from recent surgery.
U.S. and other western officials are keeping a close eye on signs that North Korea's dictator Kim Jong Il may be facing a grave illness.
Secretary of state Condoleezza Rice says she is excited about her landmark trip to Libya, when she will become the highest-ranking American official to visit the North African country in more than a half-century.
Officials say shots have been fired at a motorcade carrying the Pakistani prime minister, but that he is safe.
A former Israeli Mossad agent says the team that kidnapped Nazi mastermind Adolph Eichmann in 1960 knowingly let another notorious war criminal get away.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has accused the United States of orchestrating the conflict in Georgia to benefit one of its presidential election candidates.
Russia has recognized the independence of the breakaway Georgian territories of south Ossetia and Abkhazia.
The questions haven't gone away, but the International Olympic committee says there is still no proof that several members of the Chinese gymnastics team are underage.
Newly declassified documents show a 1998 cruise-missile strike on an Al-Qaida training camp in Afghanistan was meant to kill Osama Bin Laden.
A gorilla at a zoo in the German city of Muenster is refusing to let go of her dead baby's body several days after it died of unknown causes.
The cost of the Olympic opening ceremony in blood and sweat is starting to emerge.
Iran's official news agency says the country is preparing to build more nuclear power plants.
A small column of Russian tanks and armored vehicles has left the Georgian city of Gori.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice heads for Europe today to talk with NATO allies about what message the west, collectively, should send to Russia following its invasion of Georgia.
The Deputy Chief of Staff of Russia's military says the withdrawal of forces from the conflict zone with Georgia has begun.
Pentagon Chief Robert Gates says that if Russia doesn't pull back from Georgia, it could damage Washington-Moscow relations for years to come.
ITN Reporter John Ray is arrested in the midst of a "Free Tibet" protest.
Russia's Defense Ministry is denying Georgian reports that Russia has violated a freshly brokered truce.
The United States has spent 85 billion dollars on military contracts in Iraq.
The U.N. Refugee agency says it is mounting an emergency airlift of relief supplies to civilians caught in the conflict in Georgia.
Georgia's president says Russia's troops have effectively cut the country in half by seizing a strategic city that straddles the country's main east-west highway.
The world's seven largest economic powers are calling on Russia to accept an immediate cease-fire with Georgia and agree to international mediation over the crisis in Georgia's separatist areas.
Georgia's defense ministry says Russian armored vehicles seized a military base in western Georgia near a second breakaway province.