Most Popular
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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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Seoul blanketed by heaviest Nov. snow, with more expected
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NewJeans to terminate contract with Ador
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Seoul snowfall now third heaviest on record
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NewJeans terminates contract with Ador, embarks on new journey
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Samsung shakes up management, commits to reviving chip business
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Hybe consolidates chairman Bang Si-hyuk’s regime with leadership changes
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Heavy snow of up to 40 cm blankets Seoul for 2nd day
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Korean Air gets European nod to become Northeast Asia’s largest airline
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How $70 funeral wreaths became symbol of protest in S. Korea
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[Jose Graziano da Silva] Make migration work for rural development
Throughout history, one of the most effective strategies for people to look for a better future has been to move. In most cases leaving impoverished rural areas in search of more productive opportunities elsewhere. Indeed, migration has since our earliest days been essential to the human story — the source of multiple economic and cultural benefits.But when migration is out of extreme need, distress and despair, it becomes another story. Forced migration is rooted in conflicts, political instab
Oct. 12, 2017
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[Park Sang-seek] War of words between US and NK heads of state
US President Trump declared in his UN General Assembly speech on Sept. 19 that Kim Jong-un was a “Rocket Man on a suicidal mission for himself” and the US would totally destroy North Korea if the North attacked. Kim Jong-un personally responded by declaring that “I will surely and definitely tame the mentally deranged US dotard with fire.” Trump also made a famous statement that “they will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen” on Aug. 8 in connection with the report that North
Oct. 12, 2017
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[Michael Schuman] Can Communists be good capitalists?
As it heads into a major leadership transition, China is attempting a strange breed of corporate reform. Rather than privatizing state-owned enterprises outright, the government is testing whether selling minority stakes to private investors may improve their performance. Meanwhile, state companies are busy revising their governing laws to give the Communist Party more control over management. The goals of these clauses include ensuring that apparatchiks hold greater sway over key corporate deci
Oct. 12, 2017
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[Timothy O’Brien] Trump a world-leading gladiator in IQ smackdown
President Donald Trump has challenged Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to a duel, suggesting that he and his beleaguered adviser match scores from their respective IQ tests to see who’s smarter.To be fair to the president, Tillerson has reportedly called Trump a “moron.” Even away from Trumplandia, that’s a fighting word.“I think it’s fake news, but if he did that, I guess we’ll have to compare IQ tests,” Trump said of Tillerson in an interview that Forbes published Tuesday. “And I can tell you
Oct. 12, 2017
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[Kim Myong-sik] Koreans deserve neither war nor internal conflicts
My long extended Chuseok holiday consisted of a one-day trip to the ancestors’ gravesite on a South Coast hill, two movies on the full moon day and another on the following day, a family luncheon and a four-day stay at a friend’s country villa. The highlight, of course, was beholding the perfect lunar circle hours after watching the sun set into the horizon of the West Sea off the coast of Anmyeondo. Experts were right that the moon is “more round” on the night after Chuseok, Aug. 16 by the luna
Oct. 11, 2017
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[Robert Park] Former American prisoner of North Korea pleads for peace
Dear President Trump,Thank you for taking the time to hear my plea for peace on the Korean Peninsula.I was a US prisoner of the Kim Jong-il regime from December 2009 to February 2010. The sole reason why I entered North Korea via Hoeryung city on Dec. 25, 2009 was to call attention to human rights violations that have occurred against innocents in the region and to demand better conditions -- conducive to life -- for North Koreans. On a personal level, I have been profoundly wounded and suffered
Oct. 11, 2017
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[Christopher Balding] Don’t expect China to change
For all the mystery surrounding who will rise and fall at next week’s big leadership conclave in China, only one question really matters to investors: Will President Xi Jinping, having sidelined any obvious opposition, attack head-on the enormous imbalances and risks building inside the Chinese economy?Optimists argue that he will. The Economist Intelligence Unit recently wrote, “Xi will find his ability to implement policy substantially reinforced by newly strengthened majorities. After the Par
Oct. 11, 2017
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[Dakota L. Wood] US military in a death spiral
The more Americans hear about growing security threats worldwide, the more grateful they must feel to have a world-class military. But few know the disturbing truth: Our military, quite frankly, is in a death spiral.It’s too small for its workload, underfunded to repair and replace equipment that is rapidly wearing out, and ill-served by obsolescent infrastructure at its ports, bases, and airfields. And it’s increasingly unprepared for the rigors of a major conventional conflict, the likes of wh
Oct. 11, 2017
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[Daniel Moss] IMF risks raining on its own pretty good parade
Nobody would ever accuse the International Monetary Fund of getting carried away.Just when we are getting used to the notion of a synchronized global expansion, the lender feels it has to pad its upgraded forecasts with some dampeners. It’s almost as though there is too much good news. That’s a pity.Muffling the good news under warnings and to-do lists risks contributing to the false notion that the modern economy is somehow broken. Growth is on a firmer and broader footing now than at any point
Oct. 11, 2017
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[Adam Minter] Why Japan wants your junk
For 30 years China has recycled more cardboard boxes, plastic bottles and old computers than any other nation. By doing so, it’s saved millions of tons of resources and indirectly funded thousands of recycling programs and companies globally. But now it wants to stop. In July, China notified the World Trade Organization that it will soon prohibit the import of many types of recyclables. As a result, recycling programs and companies around the world are scrambling to find new destinations for the
Oct. 10, 2017
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[Kim Seong-kon] Superficial Korea, super-network Korea
Recently I came across an intriguing book titled “Superficial Korea” by Shin Gi-wook, a professor of sociology at Stanford. The book diagnosed and illustrated various strange phenomena and social maladies in Korean society with reference to American society and global standards. In his illuminating book, Shin perceives that Korean society enjoys “a feast of its own” that is not inviting to outsiders. He argues that in Korean society you can survive only through the “super network” formed by your
Oct. 10, 2017
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[Albert R. Hunt] The fish still stink in Trump’s Washington swamp
When Tom Price was pushed out of his cabinet job last month for sticking taxpayers with $1 million worth of private jet travel, the White House explained that his behavior was unacceptable in an administration devoted to draining the Washington swamp.I wonder where the former health and human services secretary got the notion that it was OK to mix public service and personal privilege. The values of a presidential administration flow from the top. President Donald Trump has been signaling loudly
Oct. 10, 2017
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[Ramesh Thakur] Five steps to peace in Myanmar
The humanitarian crisis afflicting Myanmar’s Muslim Rohingya has damaged the country’s political stability and shattered its image as a country moving toward democracy. Moreover, it has tarnished the reputation of the government’s de facto leader, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi; called into question the crisis-management credentials of ASEAN and the United Nations; and made a mockery of international institutions for conflict prevention.And yet, for all the woe, a resolution rem
Oct. 10, 2017
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[David Ignatius] Trump’s geopolitical straddle in Iran
Various cultures have different phrases for expressing the idea of having it both ways at once. “To take a swim and not get wet” is an Albanian proverb. Poles talk about “having the cookie and eating it.” Iranians want “both God and the sugar dates.”The Trump administration has been weighing a contemporary geopolitical version of this straddle. Hard-liners have been urging the president next week to decertify the Iran nuclear agreement but insist that he wants to strengthen the deal, not break i
Oct. 10, 2017
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[Doyle McManus] Trump undercuts Tillerson with every tweet
Last weekend, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was hard at work in Beijing, trying to persuade China’s leaders to tighten economic sanctions on North Korea. The United States wants a peaceful solution, he told them, and sanctions could force Kim Jong-un to negotiate.“We’re not going to accept a nuclear-armed North Korea,” Tillerson told reporters after his meetings. But, he said, “It’s going to be an incremental process to get there. … You’d be foolish to think you’re going to sit down and say,
Oct. 9, 2017
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[Markos Kounalakis] Trump’s right: Nuke deals are for suckers
Nuke deals are all the rage these days. The United Nations sees nuclear accords as a path to world peace. President Barack Obama worked toward a “global zero” nuclear-free future.President Donald Trump, on the other hand, is highly skeptical of deals with Iran and North Korea because he understands what Tehran and Pyongyang leaders already know: Nuclear disarmament deals are for suckers.Countries generally balk at giving up their hard-won and expensive nuclear capabilities because nuclear weapon
Oct. 9, 2017
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[David Ignatius] How subordinates can check an impulsive president
Consider what is, for the moment, an entirely hypothetical question: What might Secretary of Defense James Mattis do if he received an order from President Trump to launch a nuclear attack on North Korea in retaliation, say, for a hydrogen-bomb test that had gone awry?Certainly, Mattis could try to talk the president out of the attack, if he thought the action was unwise. He could request delays to prepare for contingencies or gather intelligence. He could even, perhaps, argue that the action ra
Oct. 9, 2017
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[Noah Smith] Japan rises as free trade leader as US sinks
Back in the 1980s or 1990s, few would have predicted that Japan would become the standard-bearer of free trade. This is, after all, the country that once tried to ban foreign-made skis by claiming that Japanese snow was different from snow in other countries.How times have changed. As the US sinks into protectionism, the Land of the Rising Sun is one of the few countries still pushing for trade agreements. Japan recently made a free trade deal with the European Union and is trying to keep the Tr
Oct. 9, 2017
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[Baltimore Sun] Outlawing bump stocks isn’t nearly enough
After Las Vegas, it’s nice to see that some Republicans are willing to consider banning bump stocks, the devices Stephen Paddock apparently used to make a dozen semiautomatic assault weapons mimic the firing rate of a fully automatic machine gun. Several top Republican senators and House members who -- it goes without saying -- are normally opposed to anything resembling gun control have said they are open to the possibility. Even the National Rifle Association says it supports additional restri
Oct. 9, 2017
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[Trudy Rubin] How to tame Kim Jong-un? Tough sanctions, not insults
The most unnerving foreign-policy scare in recent weeks has been the war of insults between President Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un.Yet here’s the most amazing aspect of Trump’s bluster: It risks undercutting the real progress his administration had made in tightening economic sanctions against Pyongyang.Those sanctions, more than dangerous and childish name-calling, offer the last hope of forcing Kim to bargain away his nukes.Trump’s taunts -- from “fire and fury” to his threat to “totall
Oct. 8, 2017