Syrian foes move towards talks but fighting rages 3:09pm EDT

BEIRUT - Syria's opposition and the government of President Bashar al-Assad seem to be preparing to take part in an international peace conference against a background of some of the worst fighting this year. | Video

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon speaks about the state of the global economy at a forum hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington October 10, 2012. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Dimon keeps dual titles after bruising battle

TAMPA, Florida - Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase's outspoken chairman and chief executive, won a vote of confidence as shareholders recommended that he keep his chairman title, giving him a greater margin of approval than last year.  Full Article 

Apple CEO Tim Cook arrives at a Senate homeland security and governmental affairs investigations subcommittee hearing on offshore profit shifting and the U.S. tax code, on Capitol Hill in Washington, May 21, 2013. REUTERS/Jason Reed

Apple hammered over offshore tax strategies

WASHINGTON - Apple came under fire at a Senate hearing over an investigation that alleged the technology icon has kept billions of dollars in profits in Irish subsidiaries and paid little or no taxes to any government.  Full Article 

A man walks next to world's biggest gas turbine inside the gas-fired power plant of German utility giant E.ON in Irsching near the southern Bavarian town of Ingolstadt April 26, 2013. REUTERS/Michaela Rehle

EU wants to nix utilities from U.S. trade talks

BRUSSELS - The European Union wants to exempt state control of utilities and support for creative industries from free trade talks with the United States due to start next month, the latest draft of Brussels' negotiating mandate showed.  Full Article 

Former Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Commissioner Douglas Shulman speaks during an interview with Reuters in Washington, October 8, 2009. REUTERS/Hyungwon Kang

IRS officials say they were unaware of targeting

WASHINGTON - Top IRS officials told Congress they were unaware of the agency's targeting of conservative groups for extra tax scrutiny until recently, and were not deliberately misleading lawmakers last year when they did not reveal the practice.  Full Article 

Former Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt enters in the Supreme Court of Justice on the sixth day of his trial in Guatemala City, March 26, 2013. REUTERS/Jorge Dan Lopez

Guatemala's Rios genocide conviction annulled

GUATEMALA CITY - Guatemala's highest court overturned a genocide conviction against former dictator Efrain Rios Montt and reset his trial back to when a dispute broke out a month ago over who should hear the case.  Full Article 

Brian Krzanich, then Intel's chief operating officer, is seen during an interview with Reuters at Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California March 13, 2012. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

With Intel shakeup, a new unit emerges

SAN FRANCISCO - Intel's new chief executive, Brian Krzanich, has launched a sweeping reorganization of the world's top chipmaker and created a unit aiming to retake the top chipmaker's lead in mobile and semiconductor innovation.  Full Article 

Fans cook sausages before opening day of baseball season as the Milwaukee Brewers take on the Colorado Rockies in a MLB National League baseball game in Milwaukee, Wisconsin April 1, 2013. REUTERS/Darren Hauck

Food labels heat up North America meat war

WINNIPEG, Manitoba/CHICAGO - The United States is poised to introduce stricter rules on the labeling of meat imports this week, a move that is likely to heat up a simmering trade dispute with Canada and Mexico.  Full Article 

John Lloyd

The European Union's unending quandary

As recession deepens in the euro zone, the political questions about what comes next are resurfacing.  Commentary 

Bill Schneider

Party opinion usurps public opinion

We are witnessing the slow death of public opinion in this country. It’s being displaced by party opinion. Elections today are less and less about persuasion and more and more about mobilization: You rally your supporters in order to beat back your opponents.  Commentary 

Jack Shafer

What was James Rosen thinking?

While I join the chorus of rage aimed at the excesses of a Department of Justice leak investigation that has criminalized the reporting of Fox News Channel’s James Rosen, I also wonder how much of Rosen’s trouble is of his own making.   Commentary 

Craig Shirley

Conservatives versus the GOP

The hoopla over the new George W. Bush Library in Dallas, as well as some gauzy looks back penned by former aides, shows we are in the middle of “The Great Bush Revisionism.” The former president is being lauded and congratulated. But for what?  Commentary 

Brenda Shaffer

For Russia, Syria is not in the Middle East

Moscow considers Syria different from its other allies in the Middle East because the outcome affects Russia's core strategic interests in the Mediterranean – including its global naval strategy and energy exports.  Commentary 

Hugo Dixon

UK should get on front foot with City

Britain has been playing a defensive game in response to the barrage of misguided financial rules from Brussels. It now needs to sell the City as part of the solution to Europe's problems. The opportunity is huge. It could even help keep Britain in the EU.  Commentary