All Asia Pacific
- Cover StoryThe US and China: Will it be collision or cooperation?
On the eve of Chinese President Xi Jinping's first state visit to the US, a China expert lays out how the two great powers can avoid confrontation.
- Thailand seeks arrest of 12th suspect in Bangkok bombing
Thai authorities on Saturday issued an arrest warrant for Abudusataer Abudureheman, 27-year-old ethnic Uighur from China, in connection with last month's bombing at a Bangkok landmark that killed 20 people.
- With China bristling, is Japan upping its military game? Some say no.
Despite a record defense budget and a push for constitutional reforms, Prime Minister Abe's initiatives may not match his tough talk.
- Flooding in Japan forces dozens of residents to rooftops, await rescue
Raging floodwaters broke through an embankment Thursday and swamped a city near Tokyo. More than 30,000 people fled their homes, and hundreds more were stranded by the water.
- Koreas agree to hold family reunions next month
The highly emotional reunions have not happened since early last year.
- Koreas start talks on reuniting families separated by Korean War
North and South Korea started to discuss resuming the reunions families separated by the Korean War in the early 1950s, Seoul officials said Monday.
- In 'non-religious' Japan, the shrine can still exert a pull
Japan is one of the world's least religious countries, according to a Gallup survey this year. Yet some observers have noted an uptick in the number of young people visiting religious sites at pivotal moments in their lives.
- Thai police seek 10th suspect in deadly Bangkok bombing
Police in Thailand are now looking for a 10th suspect in last month's bombing of the Erawan Shrine in central Bangkok that killed 20 people.
- China's military spectacle sends mixed messages
President Xi Jinping celebrates peace and promises to shrink the Chinese army – while parading with 12,000 troops and ballistic missiles.
- Standing apart, South Korea's Park heads to China's WWII extravaganza
Few Western leaders will attend a major 70th war anniversary parade in Beijing, seen as blatantly anti-Japanese. But Park's visit affirms China's role in East Asia.
- A China meltdown? Why its Asian neighbors aren't worried.
Even if economic growth in the Middle Kingdom is slowing, Pacific nations are unworried. At least so far. Many have diversified their growth models and aren't wholly dependent on China.
- In Bangkok bomb probe, taxi drivers are city's eyes and ears
An informal collaboration between police and more than 100,000 motorcycle taxi drivers has informed the footwork that led authorities to detain suspects in the case. Twenty people died when a bomb exploded at a Hindu shrine two weeks ago.
- Surprise apology by North Korea as historic talks end fruitfully
Pyongyang agreed to apologize for laying mines in the DMZ, while South Korea pledged to halt its propaganda broadcasts. The sides also agreed to meet again soon.
- Koreas resume talks as Seoul sees North Korea troop movement
The first round of talks, which started Saturday evening and finished just before dawn Sunday, came to nothing, but the second day of diplomacy has, for the time being, pushed aside the heated warnings of imminent war.
- Creative demand: Taiwan says radical school reform will set it apart
The island nation is ready to abandon rote memorization in favor of innovation and creative expression throughout its education system by 2018.
- Typhoon Goni turns north, leaving nine dead in Philippines
In the Philippines' Cordillera mountain region, Goni brought as much rain in one night as they average in a month, said officials.
- Most passionate baseball fans? Koreans say they deserve the prize.
Move over Yankee fans and Red Sox Nation: Koreans revel in the American pastime, and claim their fans are more dedicated and serious.
- Asia: 70 years after WWII, Japan gets better grades than China
Despite tensions around the anniversary of Japan's surrender, new generations in the rest of Asia see 'the Japan of today, not 70 years ago.'
- Koreas trade artillery, rocket fire at border
The artillery exchange also comes during another point of tensions between the Koreas: annual US-South Korean military drills that North Korea calls an invasion rehearsal.
- As Bangkok reels from second bombing in two days, a hunt for clues
Monday's bombing at a Hindu shrine at a downtown junction killed at least 20 people, including several Asian tourists who were praying. Police said a second botched attack Tuesday at a pier used the same type of explosive.