-
American military advisers in Cairo say the U.S. should stop sending F-16s to Egypt. Military contractors disagree.
-
Growing numbers of Egyptians are turning against the generals, politicians and youth group credited with sparking the popular groundswell that led to the ouster of President Mohammed Morsi less than a month ago. Some are joining Third Square, a new movement that's emerged as a result of growing discontent.
-
European Union Foreign Policy Chief Catherine Ashton visited Mohammed Morsi, who has been detained for nearly a month, and says he is in good health. But it's not clear where Egypt's military is holding the former leader.
-
Supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi gathered in two areas of Cairo have vowed to stay put despite clashes with security forces over the weekend that killed scores of people.
-
Protests escalated into a bloody standoff with security forces overnight, with the Muslim Brotherhood saying protesters were shot by police.
-
The charges against the ousted Egyptian leader stem from his 2011 escape from prison in the final days of the Hosni Mubarak regime.
-
Police clashed with supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi, just as the U.S. reopened its embassy in the country.
-
Robert Siegel talks to archaeologist and professor Amnon Ben Tor at Hebrew University about his recent unique find of an Egyptian sphinx in northern Israel.
-
Mohammed Morsi has been detained since a July 3 military coup in Cairo.
-
In Egypt, many are hopeful that with the Islamist president out of power, stability will return — and so will foreign investment. Already, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates are pumping billions into Egypt now that the Muslim Brotherhood is no longer in power. And miraculously, the fuel shortages and power cuts that were plaguing the nation seem to be gone.