President Donald Trump joined Queen Elizabeth II and world leaders in paying respect to Allied service members who took part in the D-Day landings.
Author: Kim Hjelmgaard, USA TODAY
Trump dismisses British protests as ‘fake news’ as thousands march against him in London
Thousands of demonstrators Tuesday showed their discontentwith President Donald Trump’s state visit to Britain.
Trump starts UK state visit with war of words, calling London mayor ‘stone cold loser’
A state visit is one of the highest honors the U.K. government can bestow on a foreign leader. Trump began his by insulting London’s mayor.
Trump’s U.K. visit: What you need to know, from royal ceremony to protests in London
While the queen has met 11 of 12 sitting U.S. presidents, only two have made state visits to Britain: George W. Bush in2003and Barack Obama in2011.
North Korea executes nuclear envoy to U.S. after failed Trump summit: report
Kim Hyok Chol was executed by firing squad in March along with four other foreign ministry officials, South Korea’s Chosun Ilbonewspaper reported.
U.N. rights expert: WikiLeaks’ Assange suffering ‘psychological torture’
Julian Assange was too sick to appear by video link for a court hearing related to his U.S. extradition case, his lawyer says.
Escalating Iran crisis looks a lot like the path US took to Iraq war
The U.S. went to war in Iraq in 2003 based on flawed intelligence supported by hawkish policy makers. Is it doomed to repeat the error with Iran?
Trump ‘friend’ Boris Johnson, who was born in the US, is the favorite to replace British Prime Minister Theresa May
Boris Johnson was born in New York City to British parents and is the former mayor of London. President Donald Trump has called him a ‘friend.’
Britain’s embattled leader Theresa May resigns premiership amid Brexit deadlock
May lasted three years in office. Her Conservative Party will start a process to replace her. It could take weeks.
After Trump and Brexit, the EU Parliament vote could further a populist wave
European voters will elect 751 lawmakers, and anti-EU parties could take more than a third of the seats in the European Parliament.