AP - Two Iraqi officials say the U.S. and Iraq are close to a deal under which all American combat troops would leave by October 2010 with remaining U.S. forces gone about three years later.
AFP - The UN atomic watchdog's number two was in Tehran on Thursday for a new round of talks on Iran's nuclear drive as Western governments said the time had come for the Security Council to impose fresh sanctions.
AFP - US President George W. Bush raised "deep concerns" about China's detention of dissidents and respect for human rights Thursday, as he prepared to head to Beijing for the Olympic Games.
Reuters - McDonald's Corp said on
Thursday it was considering further price increases, but would
do nothing that slowed customer traffic into its global network
of stores.
Reuters - Falling government revenues amid a
slowing economy, coupled with increased federal spending, will
result in a U.S. budget deficit this year of around $400
billion, the Congressional Budget Office estimated on
Wednesday.
Reuters - A top U.N. nuclear watchdog official
arrived in Iran on Thursday for talks on cooperation with the
International Atomic Energy Agency over Tehran's disputed
nuclear program, Iran's IRNA news agency reported.
Reuters - A military
jury on Wednesday convicted Osama bin Laden's driver of
supporting terrorism but acquitted him on more serious charges
of conspiring with al Qaeda to wage murderous attacks, in the
first U.S. war crimes trial since World War Two.
Reuters - Pakistan's ruling coalition led by
the party of slain former prime minister Benazir Bhutto has
agreed to begin impeachment proceedings against President
Pervez Musharraf.
Reuters - Protesters at the Democratic National
Convention in Denver can be restricted to fenced-in areas,
federal judge ruled on Wednesday, saying that security needs
outweighed curbs on their rights.
Reuters - U.S. Army scientist Dr. Bruce Ivins
was the only person responsible for the 2001 U.S. anthrax
attacks that killed five people, and authorities will close the
case, a federal prosecutor said on Wednesday.
Reuters - Doves flew and confetti rained down as
the Olympic torch was carried along the ancient Great Wall on a
misty Thursday, the day before the opening of Games that China
hopes will demonstrate its modern-day strength.
AP - Federal prosecutors have decided not to pursue a criminal case into how Heath Ledger obtained the powerful painkillers that contributed to his overdose death this year, a law enforcement official said Wednesday.
AP - Republican presidential candidate John McCain is taking up the issue of possible job losses due to the closure of a DHL shipping site in Ohio, the result of a corporate merger aided by his campaign manager during his work as a lobbyist.
AP - A loophole in a sweeping tobacco regulation bill would give the industry a 21-month window to introduce certain new products without first getting federal approval. -- read full article
Thu, 07 Aug 2008 07:51:34 GMT - Yahoo! News: Top Stories