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IRS chief declines to identify employees involved in scandal

17 May 2013

WASHINGTON - The outgoing head of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service angered Republican lawmakers on Friday by resisting their demands that he identify who at the tax-collection agency had inappropriately targeted conservative groups for extra scrutiny.

Commuter trains collide in Connecticut, injuring up to 60 people

17 May 2013

FAIRFIELD, Connecticut - A commuter train traveling eastbound from New York City derailed near the Connecticut suburb of Fairfield during the evening rush hour on Friday and collided with a westbound commuter train, injuring up to 60 people, three critically, officials said.

Tears emerge from the eye of U.S. President Barack Obama as he talks about the attack on the U.S. station in Benghazi., Libya during a joint news conference with Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron in the East Room of the White House in Washington, May 13, 2013. REUTERS/Jim Bourg

Obama loses battle over Benghazi disclosures

WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama's White House fought and lost a battle to avoid making public what it claimed were confidential records of internal deliberations over the attack on a U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya last September.  Full Article 

An exterior view of the headquarters of SAC Capital Advisors, L.P. in Stamford, Connecticut, in this picture taken December 13, 2010. REUTERS/Mike Segar

SAC backtracks on government cooperation

NEW YORK - Steven A. Cohen's hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors told investors on Friday it would no longer cooperate "unconditionally" with the U.S. government's insider trading investigation.  Full Article 

Fuel pumps are seen at a Shell petrol station in London, May 15, 2013. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor

Senator calls for federal oil price fixing probe

LONDON/WASHINGTON - A European probe into possible oil price manipulation expanded with the investigation of a small niche trading house in the Netherlands and a key senator calling for the Justice Department to take action.  Full Article 

A fighter from the Islamist Syrian rebel group Jabhat al-Nusra reacts as a picture is taken of him as their base is shelled in Raqqa province, eastern Syria, March 14, 2013. REUTERS/Hamid Khatib

Nusra Front eclipsed by Iraq-based al Qaeda

BEIRUT - The most feared and effective rebel group battling President Bashar al-Assad, the Islamist Nusra Front, is being eclipsed by a more radical jihadi force whose aims go far beyond overthrowing the Syrian leader.  Full Article 

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford leaves his home in Toronto, May 17, 2013. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Toronto mayor denies smoking crack cocaine

TORONTO - Toronto Mayor Rob Ford denied allegations that he smoked crack cocaine. "Absolutely not true... It's ridiculous," Ford told reporters gathered outside his house before driving off in his SUV.  Full Article | Video 

The Artemis Racing yacht is towed to shore after capsizing in the San Francisco Bay, May 9, 2013. REUTERS/Jed Jacobsohn

America's Cup sailing on hold for risk review

SAN FRANCISCO - Clouds hung over the America's Cup sailing regatta on Friday after investigators asked the teams to temporarily halt practicing on blustery San Francisco bay following a deadly accident last week.  Full Article 

Commuter trains collide injuring up to 60 people

May 18 - Sixty people are injured when a commuter train travelling from New York City derails near the Connecticut suburb of Fairfield and collides with another train. Sarah Charlton reports.

Nicholas Wapshott

Austerity is a moral issue

Europe’s economic turmoil is dragging the world economy down. Despite this destructive display of unnecessary masochism, many Americans still demand that the U.S. sequester be allowed to continue slashing at public spending.  Commentary 

Zachary Karabell

Massive, open, online disruption

Massive, open, online classes are transforming higher education and saving students money. So why are so many administrators and professors scared? Because tech is about to disrupt their industry like it's changed so many others.   Commentary 

Anatole Kaletsky

The radical force of 'Abenomics'

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David Rohde

Washington-gate

An increasingly polarized Washington is devouring its own. Ceaseless, take-no-prisoners political warfare, not nefarious White House plots, ravages government.  Commentary 

Jack Shafer

Why the underwear-bomber leak infuriated Obama

It wasn't the substance of the AP story that exasperated the government, but that the AP found a source or sources that spilled information about an ongoing intelligence operation and that even grander leaks might surge into the press corps’ rain barrels.  Commentary 

Yousaf Butt

‘Reset’ on Iran now

Evidence that sanctions are not achieving their purpose should give President Obama political breathing room to have negotiators put serious sanctions relief on the table – which could prove to be in America’s national security interest.  Commentary