The helicopter evacuation in Sudan was “fast and clean,” the U.S. military said, but thousands of Americans are still in the war-torn country.
Author: George Petras and Janet Loehrke, USA TODAY
Sudan: US troops evacuate embassy staff. Graphics show where rival fighting is worst.
Thousands of Americans remain in Sudan as the nation’s army and a rival paramilitary group battle each other across capital city.
111 years after Titanic sank: These graphics explore what you may not know about the ship
Artifacts and displays across the US offer glimpses of life aboard history’s most famous luxury liner. Here’s what you might not know about the ship.
US plans to expand its military presence in Philippines to counter threats against Taiwan
The U.S. is realigning its military forces with allies in the Pacific Rim to respond if China invades Taiwan – an invasion some fear is inevitable.
North Korea fires ballistic missile over Japan, raising concern over its growing nuclear program
As North Korea ramps up missile tests, U.S., allies criticize launch as ‘reckless and dangerous.’
EU officials suspect sabotage after mysterious Nord Stream gas pipeline leaks
Two separate undersea explosions are believed to have ruptured pair of Baltic Sea pipelines carrying natural gas from Russia to Europe.
Closer look at Ukraine’s decision to shut down Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant over meltdown risk
A look at the vulnerable points inside Zaporizhzhia, one of the largest — and now most at-risk — nuclear plants in Europe
Boeing 777 grounding explained visually: Pratt and Whitney engine failure involved in two incidents on same day
Two Boeing planes dropped engine parts on Saturday. Same engine manufacturer as past events. NTSB eyes fan blades cited in ‘scary’ 2018 United flight.
A look inside the Green Book, which guided Black travelers through a segregated and hostile America
The guide’s creator knew the racist dangers Black motorists faced in the 1940s through the 1960s and hoped one day his Green Books wouldn’t be needed
How the Electoral College works – and how it affected battleground states in 2020
Critics say the process puts too much emphasis on swing states and negates the popular vote