Most Popular
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Jung's paternity reveal exposes where Korea stands on extramarital babies
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Samsung entangled in legal risks amid calls for drastic reform
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Heavy snow alerts issued in greater Seoul area, Gangwon Province; over 20 cm of snow seen in Seoul
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[Herald Interview] 'Trump will use tariffs as first line of defense for American manufacturing'
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Agency says Jung Woo-sung unsure on awards attendance after lovechild revelations
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[Health and care] Getting cancer young: Why cancer isn’t just an older person’s battle
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Seoul blanketed by heaviest Nov. snow, with more expected
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K-pop fandoms wield growing influence over industry decisions
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[Graphic News] International marriages on rise in Korea
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Korea's auto industry braces for Trump’s massive tariffs in Mexico
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Korea, U.S. to conduct annual Ulchi exercise
Combined Forces Command will hold the annual Ulchi Freedom Guardian exercise from Aug. 20-31.“Ulchi Freedom Guardian is a key exercise to strengthen the readiness of Republic of Korea and U.S. forces,” Gen. James D. Thurman, commander of the Combined Forces Command, was quoted as saying in a statement. “It is based on realistic scenarios and enables us to train our essential tasks with the whole government.”In this year’s exercise, about 30,000 U.S. personnel, including 3,000 troops based outsid
July 23, 2012
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Air shows brighten T-50 prospects
Performances by Black Eagles aerobatics team boost interest in trainer jetKorea Aerospace Industries, or KAI, is in talks with numerous countries to export its advanced trainer jet T-50, the company’s CEO Kim Hong-kyung said.Speaking at the Farnborough International Airshow last week, Kim said that the company was in talks with five or six countries that have shown interest in the jet. The Farnborough International Airshow in the U.K. is one of the world’s three largest aerospace industry shows,
July 19, 2012
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S. Korea approves bid proposals for three fighter jets
South Korea's arms procurement agency said Tuesday it has approved bid proposals by three foreign defense companies for a multi-million dollar fighter jet project and will start flight tests from next week.The F-15 Silent Eagle by U.S. firm Boeing, the F-35A by another American company Lockheed Martin, and the Eurofighter by Europe-based multinational defense group EADS are in the running to win t
July 17, 2012
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S. Korean military develops smartphone apps
The South Korean military said Sunday it would introduce smartphone applications to enhance operational capabilities.The military developed nine applications, and is planning to prepare security tools for them by the end of this year before deciding which ranks will get the smartphones.According to the military, the applications were developed by a contractor under the program for establishing a pilot system for using smartphones for military purposes. The applications are to be distributed to s
July 15, 2012
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S. Korea faces strategic choices amid growing Sino-U.S. rivalry
This is the last in the series of articles on America’s refocus on the Asia-Pacific region and the possible impact on its alliances with South Korea and Japan. ― Ed.Amid an intensifying contest for primacy between the U.S. and China, policymakers in Seoul are agonizing over what strategic choices should serve the best interests of South Korea.Washington is deepening its engagement in the strategically important and economically vibrant Asia-Pacific. Apparently seeking to keep a rising China in c
July 12, 2012
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Korea mulls partial troop withdrawal from Afghanistan
South Korea is considering withdrawing at least some of its troops protecting aid workers in Afghanistan starting as early as next year, government officials said Thursday.One official said the mission for the unit, called “Ashena,”will be over at the end of this year, and other nations are also set to withdraw their forces from the war-ravaged country.“We’re looking into ways to pull out Ashena forces over several phases,” the official said.Another government official said some troops will stil
July 12, 2012
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Environment, crimes strain U.S. alliance with Korea, Japan
Environmental degradation, and accidents and crimes involving American troops have long been sources of friction in U.S. alliances with South Korea and Japan.Last year, allegations that U.S. soldiers dumped toxic chemicals such as Agent Orange at their bases in Korea decades ago sparked public furor and prompted calls for an environmental inspection of the installations suspected of contamination. A joint U.S.-South Korean investigation subsequently failed to find toxic substances at levels dang
July 12, 2012
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[Michael Raska] China’s strategy puts U.S. in dilemma on Korean Peninsula
China’s strategic imprint, whether direct or indirect, has been increasingly tied to the security and stability of the Korean Peninsula. With China’s ongoing military transformation and its growing capabilities, however, Beijing will have increasingly greater leverage and options to shape the direction and outcomes of potential crisis scenarios on the Korean Peninsula, on China’s terms.For over a decade, China’s geopolitical and economic rise has given its diplomacy more leverage in managing ten
July 12, 2012
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Sleeker USFK adapts to shifting region
American troops focus on deterring Pyongyang, countering potential threats from ChinaThis is the fourth in the series of articles on America’s refocus on the Asia-Pacific region and the possible impact on its alliances with South Korea and Japan. ― Ed.Combat-oriented Gen. James D. Thurman, commander of the U.S. Forces Korea, is striving to strengthen his troops’ war-fighting capabilities to better deal with North Korea’s continuing browbeating.The battle-experienced general has recently asked Wa
July 11, 2012
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USFK: Cornerstone of peninsular, regional security
Troop number reduced amid changes in security environment, U.S. military strategyAs the cornerstone of peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula, the U.S. Forces Korea have undergone adjustments in scale, deployment and strategies in line with changing regional and global security environment for the past 60 years.U.S. troops first entered the Korean Peninsula in September 1945, less than a month after Korea was liberated on Aug. 15 from Japan’s 36-year colonial rule. Their mission was to disa
July 11, 2012
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Environmentalists challenge base relocation in Okinawa
Some residents and environmentalists in Okinawa, Japan, have long argued that the relocation of the U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma to Camp Schwab in Nago of the same prefecture would endanger the dugong, a marine mammal regarded as vulnerable to extinction.Since the two allies agreed to move the air base to a site near Henoko Bay in 2006, opponents have called on the Tokyo government to cancel the plan, saying that the extensive land reclamation work for the relocation could jeopardize th
July 10, 2012
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U.S.-Japan alliance grows for Asia-Pacific security balance
Japan’s military buildup to play crucial role in countering ChinaThis is the third in the series of articles on America’s refocus on the Asia-Pacific region and the possible impact on its alliances with South Korea and Japan. ― Ed.Japan is more aggressively pushing to become a “normal state” with a full-fledged military as China increasingly flexes its naval might and North Korea tests its patience with missile and nuclear tests.Japan’s increasing assertiveness comes as the U.S. is deepening its
July 8, 2012
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History of U.S.-Japan alliance
The U.S. military first entered Japan to demilitarize and occupy it shortly after the end of World War II in August 1945. America moved its Southwest Pacific Command from Australia to Zama near Tokyo and renamed it the Far East Command. It was then led by Gen. Douglas MacArthur.In 1947, Japan’s postwar constitution, drafted by U.S. officials, was approved by the parliament. Its “pacifist” Article 9 states that the country renounces the use of war, and that any military forces as well as potentia
July 8, 2012
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Bidders for fighter jet project resubmit offers
Foreign defense companies competing for South Korea's a multi-billion dollar project for combat jet acquisition handed in their renewed bids Thursday, officials here said, as the evaluation process is poised to get underway.The F-15 Silent Eagle (SE) by U.S. firm Boeing, the F-35A by another American company Lockheed Martin, and the Eurofighter by Europe-based multinational defense group EADS are
July 5, 2012
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U.S. strategic pivot toward Asia deepens ties with Seoul
This is the second in the series of articles on America’s refocus on the Asia-Pacific region and the possible impact on its alliances with South Korea and Japan. ― Ed.Amid its strategic pivot toward the Asia-Pacific, America’s long-standing alliance with South Korea is expected to deepen to better deal with an increasingly bellicose North Korea and a rising China.Forged during the 1950-53 Korean War, the alliance, which had focused on deterring the North, has evolved into a more multi-faceted,
July 5, 2012
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Budget constraints get in way of pursuing high-tech weapons projects
The U.S. is focusing on securing strategic military assets with radar-evading capability to help offset China’s anti-access/area-denial capabilities.To help neutralize China’s increasingly sophisticated missile capabilities, the U.S. is seeking to introduce stealth warships and more fifth-generation combat aircraft such as the DDG-1000 Zumwalt-class destroyer and F-35 combat aircraft.Along with its missile defense program and other advanced military assets, these high-tech weapons are to be inte
July 5, 2012
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U.S. refocusing on Asia-Pacific
China’s ‘anti-access/ area-denial’ capabilities pose threat to U.S., itsallies in Asia-PacificThis is the first in the series of articles on America’s refocus on the Asia-Pacific region and the possible impact on its alliances with South Korea and Japan. ― Ed.After a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. is refocusing on the Asia-Pacific where it faces a rising China ― a potentially destabilizing factor in the regional order it has fostered since the end of World War II.It has mapped o
July 4, 2012
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Korean wartime sex slaves sue Japanese for defamation
A group of South Korean women forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese military during World War II jointly took legal action on Wednesday, denouncing a right-wing Japanese activist’s nationalistic acts and comments regarding a local bronze statue representing Japan’s wartime crimes as defamatory.The House of Sharing, an organization working for the women, said the group of 10 victims filed a defamation complaint with the Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office against far-right activist No
July 4, 2012
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Seoul sees little chance of bilateral meeting with Pyongyang at ASEAN forum
South Korea sees little chance of holding a bilateral meeting with North Korea on the sidelines of a regional security forum next week in Cambodia, a senior official at Seoul’s foreign ministry said Wednesday. The two-day Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Regional Forum, set for July 12-13, is the region’s biggest security forum. Among those attending are the countries in the six-party negotiations to end North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, which involve North and South Korea, th
July 4, 2012
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RIMPAC not targeting N.K., China, U.S. says
WASHINGTON (Yonhap News) ― As they conduct the world’s largest multinational maritime exercise, the U.S., South Korea and 20 other nations are not taking direct aim at either China or North Korea, a top American Navy officer said Tuesday.“RIMPAC is not focused on any specific geographic area within the Pacific,” Vice Adm. Gerald Beaman, commander of the U.S. Third Fleet, said during a teleconference with Asian reporters. “It’s an opportunity for all of us to come together to really improve inter
July 4, 2012