Associated Press
| May 21, 2012
President Obama and other NATO leaders have wrapped up a two-day summit in Chicago that affirmed plans for a two-year pullout from Afghanistan, and fleshed out support for that country after the combat mission ends.
Democracy Now
| May 21, 2012
Democracy Now is joined at the NATO summit in Chicago by Scott Olsen, who survived two tours in Iraq but almost died when he was hit with a police projectile at an Occupy Oakland protest last year. Olsen returned four of his medals at Sunday's ant...
Al Jazeera English
| May 21, 2012
Anti-war demonstrators have clashed with police outside the NATO summit in Chicago, with reports of injuries in the scuffle.
The hours-long standoff began after an otherwise peaceful march led by a group of veterans who spoke passionately about t...
Al Jazeera English
| May 18, 2012
US president Barack Obama's hometown of Chicago is to be the venue of the NATO summit about the future of the foreign forces in Afghanistan, which commences on Sunday.
With more than 60 heads of state to attend the summit and tens of thousands of...
— Jan 23, 2012 at 07:40 pm
LONDON (AP) -- The U.S. Ambassador to NATO said Monday one of the key goals of an upcoming summit is to ensure the alliance is prepared for new thr...
— May 15, 2012 at 05:47 pm
...strike. Thousands of tankers bound for Afghanistan are stranded in Pakistan. BBC correspondents say Pakistani leaders may have decided the block...
— May 15, 2012 at 03:44 pm
— May 15, 2012 at 12:41 pm
...almost six months after American airstrikes accidentally killed 24 Pakistani soldiers along the frontier. President Barack Obama is hosting NATO...