Most Popular
-
1
Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
-
2
Jung's paternity reveal exposes where Korea stands on extramarital babies
-
3
Seoul city opens emergency care centers
-
4
Samsung entangled in legal risks amid calls for drastic reform
-
5
Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
-
6
[Herald Interview] 'Trump will use tariffs as first line of defense for American manufacturing'
-
7
Agency says Jung Woo-sung unsure on awards attendance after lovechild revelations
-
8
[Exclusive] Hyundai Mobis eyes closer ties with BYD
-
9
[Herald Review] 'Gangnam B-Side' combines social realism with masterful suspense, performance
-
10
Why S. Korean refiners are reluctant to import US oil despite Trump’s energy push
-
[David Ignatius] America’s plentiful future
WASHINGTON ― With so much talk these days of America’s decline, it may sound strange to ponder the prospects for an American economic boom a decade or so from now. But that’s the thrust of two new studies, which have me thinking like Dr. Pangloss, Voltaire’s caricature of optimism. These analyses predict the repair of two of America’s greatest economic vulnerabilities in recent times ― dependence on foreign energy, with the threats of supply disruption, and the decline of the manufacturing secto
May 9, 2012
-
Austerity is strangling economies of eurozone
BERLIN ― The emergence of a united Europe is a process that has been going on for decades, characterized by progress but also by setbacks. There have been crises again and again in the history of European unification. Crucially, Europe has always found an answer to these crises and come out of them strengthened in the end. It will be the same this time if the political actors face up to the great challenges and muster the political will to overcome them.Since the founding of the European Coal an
May 9, 2012
-
To leave China or not, that is the question
Most dissidents in China have to face a simple but potentially life-changing question at some point in their lives: Should I stay or should I go?The answer, unfortunately, is not as straightforward.As the Chen Guangcheng incident has shown, deciding whether to leave China and go into exile is an extremely tough call.The blind legal activist was adamant that he did not want to leave his country during his stay in the United States embassy in Beijing, but changed his mind after leaving the secured
May 9, 2012
-
[Peter Singer] Are humans getting better?
MELBOURNE ― With daily headlines focusing on war, terrorism, and the abuses of repressive governments, and religious leaders frequently bemoaning declining standards of public and private behavior, it is easy to get the impression that we are witnessing a moral collapse. But I think that we have grounds to be optimistic about the future.Thirty years ago, I wrote a book called “The Expanding Circle,” in which I asserted that, historically, the circle of beings to whom we extend moral consideratio
May 9, 2012
-
Lame attempts to shut off Afghan heroin spigot
A Russian source recently brought an obscure but disturbing article to my attention. Published last month by a little-known online journal called the Oriental Review, the piece, “Active Endeavor And Drug Trafficking,” proposed that not a single gram of heroin has been confiscated on the Mediterranean Sea since the inception of NATO’s Operation Active Endeavor, a maritime operation launched a month after the Sept. 11 attacks with the mission of “monitoring shipping to help detect, deter and prote
May 8, 2012
-
[Daniel Fiedler] Multiculturalism thrives in Korea
Just over 100 years ago Shin Chae-ho, a Korean independence activist and historian, published a Korean history book in which he set forth the concept of Korean pure blood. He created this concept as a counter to the Japanese attempts to assimilate the Korean people. At that time the Japanese were trying to convince the Korean people that they were of the same racial stock. Shin’s new mythology was therefore necessary to protect Korea and its culture. Fast forward to the present day and South Kor
May 8, 2012
-
Peace with Palestine first
HAIFA ― Not long ago, a Dutch journalist interviewed me about the Iranian nuclear question. Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has allegedly banned politicians from giving interviews on the subject, so the journalist had no choice but to seek other candidates, perhaps more “intellectual,” but with no authoritative information to offer. The journalist asked me, first, if I thought that Israel would launch an attack against Iran’s nuclear plants; second, if I thought that it would be worth
May 8, 2012
-
Choosing to photograph, to publish, to look
Before they started snapping pictures, the amateur photographers of the 82nd Airborne Division whose work was recently made famous by the Los Angeles Times had official business to transact: bombings to investigate, corpses to identify, biometric information to collect. Their assignments were expressly visual: inspect, scan, document. It seems that they performed those duties. They got into trouble, however, when they started doing unauthorized visual work, posing for photos with the corpses to
May 8, 2012
-
[Meghan Daum] Loss of basic human trait, beauty in the eye of app
If you’re one of those people who says, “There should be an app for that!” every time you’re confronted with one of life’s little quandaries (recent entrepreneurial brainstorms in my household include “What’s the Dog Thinking?” and some form of gaydar), you’ve probably already imagined this: an app that will tell you how ugly you are.Too late. The Ugly Meter has been around for more than a year, but thanks to a recent mention by Howard Stern on his satellite radio show, it’s suddenly become a se
May 8, 2012
-
[Kim Seong-kon] Outsiders’ view on Korean tales
An outsider’s perspective is often illuminating and enlightening, as he or she perceives the world differently from us, and sees things that insiders tend to miss. While an outsider’s views are fresh and penetrating, an insider’s vision is often banal and myopic. In Korea, for example, the famous short story, “Kapitan Lee,” is widely known as an account of an opportunistic doctor who manages to survive Korea’s turbulent years of the Japanese occupation, and the liberation and division of the cou
May 8, 2012
-
Shortcut culture mars China’s reputation
China is facing a product-quality scandal once again, another in a seemingly endless string ― though right now the blind dissident’s great escape last week and the Bo Xilai family cataclysm are smothering all news of it.Still, the new scandal and the Bo case derive from a single cultural cause.A few days ago, the state announced that it has detained 54 suspects, shut down 80 “illegal production lines” and seized 77 million gelatin capsules used for prescription drugs, all of them heavily contami
May 7, 2012
-
[Mohamed A. El-Erian] Germany’s neighborhood watch
FRANKFURT ― On a recent trip to Germany, I was struck by two distinct narratives. One narrative features a robust German economy with low unemployment, strong finances, and the right competitive position to exploit the most dynamic segments of global demand. The other narrative describes an economy that is encumbered by never-ending European debt crises whose perpetrators seek to shift their responsibility ― and their financing needs ― onto Germany’s pristine balance sheet.Both narratives are un
May 7, 2012
-
Islamists evolving in Middle Eastern politics
Islamist politics in the Middle East cracked wide open with the Arab Awakening: Islamists have emerged on top in Tunisia, Libya, Iraq and Egypt. Western publics, lulled by the sight of iPhones and other social media at work, assumed that the demonstrations, rebellions and regime changes were all driven by Muslim wannabe Westerners and that Islamist politics were relics of the past.But when dictators started to fall, it shouldn’t have been any surprise that Islamists quickly came out on top. This
May 7, 2012
-
Mutual defense of the sea is not cross-strait military cooperation
Lai Shing-yuan, chairwoman of the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC), was asked a couple of days ago at the Legislative Yuan if Taiwan would cooperate with the People’s Republic of China in the defense of the small archipelagoes in the South China Sea. She said Taiwan would never do so, perhaps to please the Philippines, Vietnam and probably the United States as well. These countries are very concerned about Taiwan ganging up with China to fight another mini-war over the island groups known to be su
May 7, 2012
-
[Brahma Chellaney] The resistible rise of Asia still far from certain
NEW DELHI ― A favorite theme in international debate nowadays is whether Asia’s rise signifies the West’s decline. But the current focus on economic malaise in Europe and the United States is distracting attention from the many serious challenges that call into question Asia’s continued success.To be sure, today’s ongoing global power shifts are primarily linked to Asia’s phenomenal economic rise, the speed and scale of which have no parallel in world history. With the world’s fastest-growing ec
May 7, 2012
-
Exit from Afghanistan: Why wait two and a half years?
No argument is necessary about whether President Obama‘s six-hour visit to Afghanistan was political. Of course it was. Obama is running for re-election. The better question is whether a celebration is justified.Regarding the mission to assassinate Osama bin Laden -- and Wednesday was the anniversary of it -- some crowing is fine. The Navy SEALs’ mission was successful, and spectacularly so. Obama ordered it. He took the political risk and won a victory for America. Any president would remind pe
May 7, 2012
-
The Resistible Rise of Asia?
A favorite theme in international debate nowadays is whether Asia’s rise signifies the West’s decline. But the current focus on economic malaise in Europe and the United States is distracting attention from the many serious challenges that call into question Asia’s continued success.To be sure, today’s ongoing global power shifts are primarily linked to Asia’s phenomenal economic rise, the speed and scale of which have no parallel in world history. With the world’s fastest-growing economies, fas
May 7, 2012
-
Syrian collapse may create fertile ground for anarchy
TEL AVIV ― The failure of the Obama administration, its Western allies, and several Middle East regional powers to take bolder action to stop the carnage in Syria is often explained by their fear of anarchy. Given the Syrian opposition’s manifest ineffectiveness and disunity, so the argument goes, President Bashar al-Assad’s fall, when it finally comes, will incite civil war, massacres, and chaos, which is likely to spill over Syria’s borders, further destabilizing weak neighbors like Iraq and L
May 6, 2012
-
[Robert B. Reich] Why EU double dip could spread to U.S.
Europe is in recession. Portugal, Italy and Greece are basket cases. The British and Spanish economies have contracted for the last two quarters. It seems highly likely that France and Germany are in a double dip as well.Why should we care? Because a recession in the world’s third-largest economy (Europe) combined with the current slowdown in the world’s second-largest (China), spells trouble for the world’s largest (that’s still us).Remember, it’s a global economy. Money moves across borders at
May 6, 2012
-
Merkel cast in role of austerity goddess
Three decades ago, U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was confronted with a nation bordering on irrelevance, a stagnant economy and a set of entrenched beliefs about the relationship between government and the people. Thatcher faced down striking coal miners and forced through a series of free-market reforms that unshackled Britain’s economy and made it vibrant once again. To the chorus of accusations that she was killing the economy, she replied: “There is no alternative.” She was right. Sho
May 6, 2012