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The BBC's Ian Pannell on the future of the war in Afghanistan after spending a week with the Royal Marines.
Henri Astier asks whether Barack Obama's worldwide popularity can help restore US influence in the world.
Does the turmoil in the financial markets mean the end of capitalism? Leading economists and thinkers give their views.
Mexico's finance minister says that violence and crime is affecting the economy, cutting growth by 1%.
Hundreds of thousands of Mexicans attend nationwide protests against a wave of killings and kidnappings.
A mother is told that she must be police checked before travelling with her epileptic son to a special school.
BBC NI political editor Mark Devenport looks at the leaders who helped shape the Good Friday Agreement 10 years ago.
The Football Association rejects the Premier League's initial plans to play matches abroad.
Premier League chief Richard Scudamore insists plans to host games abroad are "not a dead duck".
BBC Middle East correspondent Tim Franks sends the latest edition of his diary.
The US president says Iran must still fully reveal its nuclear activities, or face further international isolation.
A look at what is making the headlines in Wednesday's morning newspapers.
M Ilyas Khan in Karachi examines the impact of the decision of the Supreme Court in Pakistan to reinstate the suspended chief justice.
Nine decades ago the Royal Family switched to an English-sounding name because of anti-German feeling, as did some of their subjects. Is there an echo of this predicament today?
The search for a solution to Darfur's crisis goes on after Paris peace talks - without any of Sudan's main players.
We join French K-For on patrol in the ethnic enclaves of North Kosovo as part of our series on peacekeeping today.
Two experts put the case for and against the licence fee, which funds the BBC.
With the Israeli army on the move into southern Lebanon, it is almost as if things are back to square one in the conflict, says Paul Reynolds.
Perihan Magden goes on trial in Istanbul accused of trying to turn Turks against compulsory military service.
The US is taking a new approach to tackling North Korea's nuclear programme, says the BBC's Paul Reynolds.
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