Page last updated at: 10:09 PM PST | Mon, 01 Dec, 2008 | Rabi-us-Sani 5, 1431
Chilean newspaper La Nacion portrays Obama as the superstar who will rule the world. —AP
Media Gallery on Pakistan's public reaction to Obama's election

Kristoff’s sculpts out a plan of action that needs to be implemented.

US President-elect Barack Obama (R) answers a journalists question next to Vice President-elect Joe Biden (L) during his first press conference following his election victory in Chicago, November 7, 2008. (file photo)

Muslims groups reiterated their opposition to Al Qaeda's divisive rhetoric.

Al Qaeda number two Ayman al-Zawahiri in previous video appearance.—AFP/File

Indian writer Kuldip Nayar advocates a firmer policy stance on the US.

A mural of newly elected US President Barack H. Obama in Venice Beach, California. - AFP

Is the ‘great game’ aimed at weakening our country and defanging it?

A US Army soldier walks during a patrol in Tal Kaeef, north of Mosul, 360 kilometers northwest of Baghdad, Iraq, on Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2008.—AP

Sep 6, 1996: Clinton wooed Pakistani Americans on the campaign trail.

Former US President William (Bill) Jefferson Clinton.

Mar 24, 1981: ‘(Nukes and human rights) don’t mean nearly so much to Reagan.’

Official portrait of US President Ronald Reagan, 1981.

Aug 1, 1971: Crisis in Pakistan became an American political issue.

Former US President Richard Nixon

Aug 21, 1960: Voters asked whether they would vote for a Catholic candidate.

John F. Kennedy.

Proposition 8 could open the door to legal discrimination against unpopular groups.

Supporters of gay marriage rally on the steps of the State Capitol November 22, 2008 in Sacramento, California

The honeymoon between Obama and Muslims worldwide may be very brief.

US President-elect Barack Hussain Obama. — Reuters

'It will take sustained leadership to close the dangerous gaps.'

A Greenpeace activist at a protest against nuclear development and proliferation staged in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil. - AP

Obama allowed Lieberman to keep the chairmanship despite backing for McCain.

Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., is questioned by reporters as he walks to the Senate Chamber on Capitol Hill. -AP Photo