Free Syrian Army fighters prepare to launch a rocket in Deir al-Zor, May 18, 2013. The text on the wall reads "Yes". Picture taken May 18, 2013.  REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi

Hezbollah steps up Syria battle, Israel warns of strikes

AMMAN - Lebanese Hezbollah militants attacked a Syrian rebel-held town alongside Syrian troops and Israel threatened more attacks on Syria to rein the militia in, highlighting the risks of a wider regional conflict if planned peace talks fail.   Full Article 

Insight: Despite curbs, China's vast hot money triangle flourishes 4:59pm EDT

ZHUHAI, China/HONG KONG - In an underground mall just a stone's throw from China's teeming border with Macau, a row of 30 small shops with identical golden plaques does a brisk, though shadowy trade with mainland Chinese visitors, many of them bound for the gambling hub.

People work on machines at a clothing factory in the industrial town of Newcastle, 162 miles southeast of Johannesburg, May 8, 2013. REUTERS/Jon Herskovitz

South Africa struggles not to be Bangladesh

NEWCASTLE, South Africa - South Africa says its garment industry is better regulated and workers are better paid than in ultra low-cost Asian producers like Bangladesh. Yet the ruling government, with close links to labor unions, wants to go further.  Full Article 

Los Angeles mayoral candidate Eric Garcetti speaks during an election night party at Avalon night club in Hollywood, California, March 5, 2013. REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn

Budget weighs heavily in Los Angeles race

LOS ANGELES - Amid the mudslinging that has marked Los Angeles' mayoral race, the two candidates vying to lead America's second-largest city agree on this: Its finances are terrible, and potential fiscal meltdown looms large.  Full Article 

Algeria's President Abdelaziz Bouteflika waves during a speech to commemorate the 38th anniversary of the nationalization of hydrocarbon resources in Oran February 24, 2009. REUTERS/Louafi Larbi

With president ailing, new era beckons Algeria

ALGIERS - Three weeks after President Abdelaziz Bouteflika was rushed to hospital in Paris, Algeria is preparing for a successor who for the first time will come from a generation too young to have fought in Algeria's war of independence against France.  Full Article 

Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel (L) and Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey hold a joint news conference at the Pentagon in Washington March 17, 2013.  REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Training fails to halt military sexual assault crisis

WASHINGTON - The U.S. armed forces in recent years rolled out education programs about proper sexual conduct through methods like role playing and video games. But that has failed to prevent a reported 37 percent jump in sexual assault cases in 2012.  Full Article 

Valentin Boanta looks on during an interview with Reuters in his cell at the Vaslui penitentiary, 211 miles northeast of Bucharest May 15, 2013. REUTERS/Bogdan Cristel

Penitent hacker aims to protect world's ATMs

VASLUI, Romania - Valentin Boanta is an unlikely warrior in the fight against cyber crime. Currently in prison for aiding a gang that copied data from ATM cards, he says he's invented a device that could prevent the same crime he helped commit.  Full Article | Slideshow 

REUTERS/Screengrab

'Superfood' project aims to curb malnutrition

The potential of algae to feed the hungry is being turned into reality by students at a high school in Tel Aviv. The students are developing a system to convert highly nutritious spirulina algae into powder for distribution in poor African communities.  Video 

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'

The financial arithmetic of Abenomics means that tolerable stagnation is no longer an option for Japan. Will the radical steps taken by the government be enough to fix the country's economy?  Commentary 

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