Lian Yang, above, spent nearly 11 months in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to violate U.S. arms trafficking laws. Today, he calls his attempt "wrong" but says the U.S. government "grossly exaggerated" what he did. REUTERS/JASON REDMOND

China enlists amateurs in quest for U.S. arms tech

Beijing “floods the zone with buyers” for smuggled American military gear, leading to a 50 percent spike in arms trafficking cases since 2010, Reuters has found.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

Housing starts jump to near six-year high in November 8:49am EST

WASHINGTON - U.S. housing starts surged to their highest level in nearly six years in November, a sign of strength in the housing market that could give the Federal Reserve ammunition to start cutting back its bond purchases.

Police watch as supporters of Rashtrawadi Shiv Sena, a Hindu hardline group, take part in a protest near the U.S. embassy in New Delhi December 18, 2013.  REUTERS/Ahmad Masood

India's diplomatic row with U.S. deepens

NEW DELHI - India announced retaliatory measures against the United States, including revising work conditions of Indians employed in U.S. consulates and a freeze on duty-free alcohol, in an escalating row over the arrest of a diplomat in New York.  Full Article 

Russia's President Vladimir Putin (R) looks at his Ukrainian counterpart Viktor Yanukovich during a signing ceremony after a meeting of the Russian-Ukrainian Interstate Commission at the Kremlin in Moscow, December 17, 2013. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin

Ukrainian president under pressure over bailout

KIEV - Ukraine's president faced calls to resign over a $15-billion bailout from Russia which the opposition and protesters said had sold the country out to its former Soviet masters in Moscow.  Full Article | Video 

Senator Mark Udall (D-CO) talks to the media after former CIA Director David Petraeus testified at a Senate Intelligence Committee closed hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, November 16, 2012. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Senator demands CIA report on torture

WASHINGTON - A senator disclosed the existence of a secret Central Intelligence Agency document that some legislators believe supports their conclusions in a study highly critical of "waterboarding" and other harsh counterterrorism practices.  Full Article 

Greece's Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras talks to European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi (R) during a eurozone finance ministers meeting in Brussels December 17, 2013. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir

Euro zone agrees on bank closure funding

BRUSSELS - Euro zone finance ministers made progress on some details of a plan to close banks, paving the way for completion of a euro zone 'banking union' that is to restore confidence in the financial sector and boost growth.  Full Article 

One of Bitcoin enthusiast Mike Caldwell's coins in this photo illustration at his office in Sandy, Utah, September 17, 2013.    REUTERS/Jim Urquhart

China tightens curbs on bitcoin trade

BEIJING - A Chinese bitcoin exchange platform has stopped taking Chinese yuan deposits, sending the price of the virtual currency down sharply as China broadened its crackdown on domestic bitcoin trading.  Full Article 

South Sudan clashes kill 400-500

Dec. 18- The UN says hundreds of people have died in clashes in the South Sudanese capital Juba after fighting between rival groups of soldiers over the last few days. Sarah Toms reports.

Fed Decision

John Lloyd

The EU's soft power and the big carrot

Europe uses “soft power,” defined as the power to influence other countries without force or money by drawing people to it who, by “admiring its values, emulating its example, aspiring to its level of prosperity and openness -- want to follow it.”  Commentary 

Allison Schrager

Should the U.S. force citizens to save?

Nudging - defaulting people into a saving plan - has been proven extremely effective at increasing participation in pension accounts.  Commentary 

Steven Brill

Profiling John Miller

Let's hear CBS correspondent John Miller talk about the trade-off between being a reporter covering what others are doing versus being one of the doers.  Commentary 

Nicholas Wapshott

Obama, Castro, and the perversity of the Cuban embargo

So long as the doddering Castro brothers are in charge, Cuba is ripe for another revolution. But this time it will be a free market revolt, not a plunge into further darkness.  Commentary 

Lawrence Summers

On secular stagnation

We must acknowledge the possibility that the American and global economies cannot rely on normal market mechanisms to assure full employment and strong growth without sustained unconventional policy support.  Commentary 

Brenda Shaffer

Iran: More than Persia

In the multi-ethnic state that is Iran, the political meaning of the population’s diversity will have serious consequences as political normalization with the West continues.  Commentary