
Fears Isis now has an airforce
Islamic State (Isis) militants are believed to be learning to fly three captured fighter jets, which could signal the terrorist group taking to the air for the first time.
Islamic State (Isis) militants are believed to be learning to fly three captured fighter jets, which could signal the terrorist group taking to the air for the first time.
A summit of military commanders from the US-led coalition against the Islamic State, including New Zealand, will meet in Washington tomorrow.
Australian special forces and aircraft will not be sent into Iraq until the Cabinet considers a risk assessment and the United Nations gives the operation the nod.
A cruise through ancient lands exposes kids to a diverse culture and religion, writes Heidi Douglas.
The Sydney grandfather of a 7-year-old boy pictured clutching the severed head of a Syrian soldier has urged the Australian Government to bring the boy home.
US air strikes are boosting Kurdish morale as they hit Isis fighters, and a road is now open for thousands of Yazidis cut off in the mountains.
An Australian jihadist has tweeted a photo of his young son holding up a severed head of a dead Syrian soldier.
Prime Minister John Key is rejecting claims the Government is too soft on Israel and should expel the Israeli Ambassador.
Dubai is more than skyscrapers, mega-malls and man-made islands, writes Linda Herrick.
Qantas has reassured passengers it's still safe to fly over Iraq, despite network partner Emirates' deciding to steer clear of the conflict-torn nation.
A plan to blow up a plane on Christmas Day in 2009 failed because the explosives became 'degraded' after he wore the same pair of underpants for two weeks.
Despite the danger of daily rocket fire, life carries on as normal under the Iron Dome, writes Rhys Davies.
Social media has become one of the weapons of war. The Israeli army, which has been on Twitter since 2009, now has 286,000 followers.
Washington has warned Israel against any ground invasion of Gaza, as the UN says more than 40 of the 176 dead were children.
Kurdish leaders accuse Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki of being hysterical and unbalanced, while he says the Kurdish capital, Erbil, is a centre for the Islamic State (Isis) and adherents of Saddam Hussein.
Israeli-Palestinian relations in new crisis with violent clashes following the discovery of body of a Palestinian teenager apparently abducted in revenge attack.
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the self-proclaimed leader of the Islamic State stretching across Iraq and Syria, has promised to lead the conquest of Rome.
This winter was not a good one for farmers in the Fertile Crescent.
New Zealand is not likely to be part of a military intervention in Iraq, according to Prime Minister John Key.
Liam Dann asks, "What sort of economic fallout can we expect if Baghdad falls? It is a question that has carried serious geopolitical weight for thousands of years."
Pope Francis sacked the five-man board of the Vatican's financial watchdog - all Italians - in the latest move to break with a murky past under his predecessor.