Most Popular
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Actor Jung Woo-sung admits to being father of model Moon Ga-bi’s child
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Wealthy parents ditch Korean passports to get kids into international school
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Man convicted after binge eating to avoid military service
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First snow to fall in Seoul on Wednesday
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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
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Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
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Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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Job creation lowest on record among under-30s
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[George Soros] The promise of ‘Regrexit’
LONDON -- Until the people of the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union, the refugee crisis was the greatest problem Europe faced. Indeed, that crisis played a critical role in bringing about the greater calamity of Brexit.The vote for Brexit was a great shock. The morning after the vote, the disintegration of the European Union seemed practically inevitable. Brewing crises in other EU countries, especially Italy, deepened the dark forecast for the EU’s survival.But as the initial sho
July 11, 2016
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Ambush in Dallas: ‘This must stop -- this divisiveness’
Ambush is the coward’s tool: Only in bloodlust fiction and declared war does surprise assassination run the chance of improving a situation. But on Thursday night in Dallas, ambush was the way to start a skirmish or settle a score.Before America’s computer and television screens came alive with news of the slaughter, the evening had been peaceful. Dallas police officers had tweeted photos of themselves alongside demonstrators marching to protest the police shooting deaths of two black men in Lou
July 11, 2016
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What police need from citizens
Dallas Police Chief David Brown said something on Friday that needed saying. After updating the public on a sniper attack that targeted white police officers -- killing five officers and injuring at least six -- Brown spoke about the heroism of police who ran toward gunfire “with no chance to protect themselves, to put themselves in harm’s way, to make sure citizens can get to a place of security.” Police officers all over the country take such selfless risks every day. They are not especially w
July 11, 2016
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[Jose Graziano da Silva] No landing, no pirates: treaty can sink illegal fishing
Last year, roughly 1 of every 6 fish sold around the world was caught illegally. That number is now poised to drop precipitously, thanks to the Port State Measures Agreement, the world’s first international treaty designed specifically to tackle illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing.Under this new agreement, parties are obliged to ensure that any fishing vessel that comes to its port, even for refueling, must announce that it is doing so and submit to an inspection of their log book, licen
July 10, 2016
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[Joseph E. Stiglitz] Understanding policy failures that led to Brexit
Digesting the full implications of the United Kingdom’s “Brexit” referendum will take Britain, Europe, and the world a long time. The most profound consequences will, of course, depend on the European Union’s response to the U.K.’s withdrawal. Most people initially assumed that the EU would not “cut off its nose to spite its face”: after all, an amicable divorce seems to be in everyone’s interest. But the divorce -- as many do -- could become messy.The benefits of trade and economic integration
July 10, 2016
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[Peter Singer] Brexit’s lessons for direct democracy
What role should referenda play in a democracy? That question has become more relevant than ever, following the United Kingdom’s “Brexit” referendum, which resulted in a 52 percent to 48 percent vote to leave the European Union -- and brought an abrupt end to British Prime Minister David Cameron’s political career.Brexit opponents have since suggested that, because referenda have no constitutional status in Britain, and Parliament must make the final decision, the result should be ignored. Are t
July 10, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Britain’s rebuke holds message for America
Since its unfortunate Brexit vote to leave the European Union, Britain has experienced a tragi-comic round of backstabbing, foot-dragging and second-guessing. Europe, meanwhile has mostly behaved with admirable good sense. The Europeans seem to understand that the Brexit vote is a wake-up call about dissatisfaction with the EU that’s nearly as widespread on the continent as it is in Britain. Germany, in particular, recognizes that unless the EU can quickly show a readiness to reform and streamli
July 10, 2016
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[Rachel Marsden] Is CNN’s new spy show telling you the truth?
CNN has launched a new television series titled “Declassified: Untold Stories of American Spies.” The program, hosted and produced by former U.S. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, is advertised as “revealing the unbelievable true stories of America’s covert operations in the United States and around the world.”In case you think that the CIA is stripping down to its operational skivvies for your viewing pleasure, it’s worth noting how difficult the agency typically makes such a t
July 10, 2016
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[David Ignatius] The Islamic State has made a big mistake
In the global revulsion at the past week’s terror attacks in four Muslim countries, the United States and its allies have a new opportunity to build a unified command against the Islamic State and other extremists. But as the U.S. seeks to broaden this counterterrorism alliance, it should be careful about partnering with Russia -- unless Moscow distances itself from a Syrian regime that many Sunni Muslims despise. The savage attacks in Turkey, Bangladesh, Iraq and Saudi Arabia should convince Mu
July 8, 2016
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[Sinan Ulgen] The southern strategy NATO needs
For almost seven decades, NATO has amply demonstrated its ability to fulfill its core mission of deterring a conventional attack against its member countries. But the threat landscape on NATO’s southern flank is changing, pushing the alliance toward uncharted waters. This week’s NATO summit in Warsaw will amount to a litmus test of the Alliance’s ability to adapt to the new more complex security challenges that it faces. Since the Cold War, when it was positioned as a bulwark against Soviet expa
July 8, 2016
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[Warren Fernandez] Warning: more Brexit-style shock waves ahead
This is the first in a new series of columns on global affairs which will be written by top editors from members of the Asia News Network and published in newspapers across the region. --Ed. The shock waves triggered by Britain’s decision to quit Europe continue to reverberate around the world, including here in Asia. It should prompt some soul-searching among the key players: politicians, pollsters, pundits, as well as voters.For unless the right lessons are drawn and acted on, the road the wor
July 7, 2016
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IS unleashes bloodbath outside Mideast
The nearly simultaneous and highly coordinated series of bombings in divergent points in the world indicate an alarming expansion in the Islamic State group’s capability to inflict bloodbath and mayhem far outside the Middle East.In the aftermath of the terror attacks in Paris in November 2015, the French tricolor bloomed on Facebook as millions of people worldwide expressed sympathy for the 129 people who died, and for a universally beloved city scarred by violence. Five months later, similar a
July 7, 2016
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[Jintana Panyaarvudh] Storytelling a challenge for news providers these days
Media providers across the world are struggling with challenges posed by the mobile platform and everybody is looking for the best solution.Most of us in the news industry know that not only is readership in print media declining, but Internet news is also in a crisis as people nowadays, especially the young generation, rely on smartphones or the so-called “second screen” for updates.These mobile-centric consumers of news were the highlight of a News Lab Summit held by Google in Tokyo late last
July 7, 2016
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[Ana Palacio] Securing a post-Brexit Europe
It is said that good things come to those who wait. If so, then the European Union’s new Global Strategy on Foreign and Security Policy, more than a decade overdue, must be a very good thing.Actually, it is exactly what Europe needs. But the timing of its release -- in the immediate aftermath of the United Kingdom’s vote to leave the EU -- could relegate it to irrelevance. How the EU moves forward with the strategy will be a bellwether for the future of the European project.The strategy, develop
July 7, 2016
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[Robert B. Reich] Trump: The rise of a huckster populist
The tectonic plates of American politics are no longer moving along the old fault lines of “left vs. right” or even Democrat vs. Republican.As we’ve seen this bizarre political year, the biggest force welling up is rage against insider elites in both parties and against the American establishment as a whole -- including the denizens of Wall Street, large corporations and the mainstream media.Now, with Bernie Sanders essentially out of the race, Donald Trump wants Americans to believe he’s the re
July 7, 2016
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[Kim Myong-sik] Warning ourselves of optimism from uncertainty
K.C. (Kyung-choon) Hwang, undisputed doyen of international journalism in Seoul, stays healthy at 92, frequently writing for an online circular of retired journalists, diplomats, professors and others who like to share their thoughts on contemporary affairs here and abroad. “Seolmaga Saram Japneunda” was the title of a piece the former Seoul bureau chief of the Associated Press in the 1970s wrote in Korean right after the Brexit vote. It means “‘Seolma’ kills you” or, more mildly, “‘Seolma’ can
July 6, 2016
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[Erik Berglof] European project lives on in Ukraine
The outcome of the United Kingdom’s Brexit referendum shocked populations across Europe. But watching the response in Lviv, in western Ukraine — a hub of enthusiasm about the European Union — was particularly jarring.At a time when irresponsible opportunists and populists in the U.K. are taking a wrecking ball to their country’s own institutions, and those of Europe, Ukrainian reformers are trying to build something new. Whereas the U.K.’s “Leave” campaign peddled trumped-up dangers from immigra
July 6, 2016
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[Trudy Rubin] Pro-EU voices must be decisive and passionate
Shortly before the Brexit vote, Germany’s Der Spiegel magazine ran a cover story that urged the Brits: “Please don’t go.” For Germans, long the most loyal supporters of the European Union, it was unthinkable that the British would leave them. After the Brexit shock, Der Spiegel has a new plea: “If we don’t become more passionate about the European Union, we will lose it,” writes columnist Stefan Kuzmany. There is widespread agreement that the future of a united Europe will be decided more by emo
July 6, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Navy builds strength by saving energy
The week of July 4 is a good moment to salute an unlikely champion of saving energy and switching to alternative fuels -- the U.S. Navy. Once a supreme fuel-guzzler whose energy needs sometimes dictated foreign policy, the Navy has become a model for how the country can curb its appetite for fossil fuels. The Navy’s energy diet began seven years ago with an edict from newly appointed Secretary Ray Mabus, who issued five goals for radically changing how the Navy bought and consumed fuel. A former
July 6, 2016
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[Kim Yoon-mi] Child care: It takes two to tango
On a working Sunday afternoon at the office, I received a funny message from my husband who was at home. In the attached photo, my 3-year-old son was taking a nap lying down on top of daddy’s tummy with his face resting comfortably on my husband’s chest. “I’ve been lying on the floor like this for two hours,” my husband said in the message, holding his smartphone with one hand to kill time and embracing the boy with the other. He couldn’t get the boy off because the slightest hint of a move woul
July 6, 2016