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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Trump picks ex-N. Korea policy official as his principal deputy national security adviser
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First snow to fall in Seoul on Wednesday
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Man convicted after binge eating to avoid military service
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S. Korea not to attend Sado mine memorial: foreign ministry
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Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
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Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
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Toxins at 622 times legal limit found in kids' clothes from Chinese platforms
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Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
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[Doyle McManus] Five things Trump could do to stop Russia’s meddling
Recently, the Pentagon’s cyberdefense commander was asked whether the government has done enough to protect the 2018 congressional election against Russian hacking. “We’re not where we need to be,” Adm. Mike Rogers told a Senate committee. Rogers echoed warnings from other intelligence officials that Russian President Vladimir Putin intends to keep meddling in US and foreign elections until someone makes him stop. “President Putin has clearly come to the conclusion that there’s little price to p
March 7, 2018
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[Kim Seong-kon] Sword of Damocles dangling above South Korea
These days, my American friends often compare the situation in South Korea to the “Sword of Damocles.” A friend recently wrote me, saying, “In my eyes, South Korea is, like Damocles, sitting under swords that can fall on her head at any time without warning.” Damocles was a courtier in the court of Dionysius II of Syracuse, Sicily, in the fourth century. He was envious of King Dionysius’ power and glory. Dionysius offered to switch places with him for a day so that Damocles could have a taste of
March 6, 2018
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[The Baltimore Sun] Trump tariffs won’t bring back steel mills
If there’s any community that can feel the changes that have rocked the American steel industry over the decades, it’s Baltimore. What was once the single largest steel factory in the world, the giant Bethlehem Steel plant in Sparrows Point, is completely gone. Not even a shadow of this former ticket to the middle class for tens of thousands of Baltimoreans remains, and the warehousing, distribution and other businesses that have recently sprung up in its place, while welcome, provide nowhere ne
March 6, 2018
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[Lee Jae-min] “Wo-La-Bael” finally
According to experts at think tanks in Seoul, when it comes to raising a family there are three indispensable elements: a stable job, a decent dwelling and a family-friendly or -supportive social system. On all three counts, we are failing, and failing miserably. Getting a job after college graduation requires acrobatic performance with stellar academic record and unbelievable field experience. Housing prices are going through the roof. Child education is extremely costly. Worse yet, the situati
March 6, 2018
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[Hal Brands] Xi may scare Asia back Into Washington’s orbit
One thing seems certain about Xi Jinping’s move to establish himself as China’s dictator for life: The bolder and more openly assertive foreign policy he has pursued since taking power five years ago is here to stay. The conventional wisdom is that the US, its Asian allies, and the broader international order are therefore in for a rough stretch, as China demands its place in the sun. What’s indisputable is that Xi’s approach to foreign affairs marks the culmination of a break with Deng Xiaopin
March 6, 2018
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[Christopher Balding] Is China destined to dominate tech?
The digital world relies on data, and no one produces more of it than China’s 1.4 billion internet users. The vast wealth of information these users emit has helped Chinese tech companies become some of the world’s best, and led to speculation that China will inevitably dominate future technologies, such as artificial intelligence. But this is almost certainly mistaken. Data, it turns out, isn’t destiny. Even in the digital age, data may have a declining utility. Tech companies already have mill
March 6, 2018
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[Michael Schuman] China gains from Trump's tariffs
If Donald Trump was aiming at China with his lofty proposed tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, he’s a terrible marksman. Not only will Chinese leaders likely brush off the measures. They have good reason to embrace them.China is unquestionably the big, bad wolf of the global steel industry. With roughly 10 times the steelmaking capacity of the US, it’s been widely accused of dumping cheap steel on global markets, pushing competitors in other countries to the wall. The Trump administration h
March 5, 2018
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[Leonid Bershidsky] Cocaine bust is latest sign of Putin’s weakness
The mind-boggling news story of cocaine-filled suitcases at the Russian embassy school in Buenos Aires demonstrates that the tolerance President Vladimir Putin’s regime has shown for all kinds of moonlighting and freelancing by its servants has gone too far. The regime needs to find a way to curb it; otherwise it will end up being treated as a criminal organization. The official version of the story raises more questions than it answers. Some 18 months ago someone (the Russian Foreign Ministry w
March 5, 2018
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[Eli Lake] Why Trump is reluctant to escalate cyberwar
Leaders of the US intelligence community have no doubt that Russian trolls, bots and hackers are planning to meddle in the midterm elections this fall, and to date President Donald Trump has not instructed his cyber generals to hit back. This was the upshot of Senate testimony Tuesday from Adm. Mike Rogers, the director of the National Security Agency and chief of US Cyber Command. He was repeating a warning voiced by intelligence community leaders earlier this month. Asked if he has been direc
March 5, 2018
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[Katie Reid] I traded my smartphone for a flip phone; here’s why
On Tuesday, I traded in my iPhone for a flip phone. Well, technically, I got to keep the iPhone. But when I asked the Verizon employee if the iPhone would be deactivated after he was finished setting up my sturdy new Kyocera, he looked at me gravely and replied, “It’s already deactivated.”So, yeah, I still have it, but it’s “passed on,” so to speak. I first had the urge to ditch my smartphone over a year ago, when I realized the first thing I did in the morning -- like, as soon as I opened my ey
March 5, 2018
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[Lawrence Downes] Holy nonsense: The ‘godly’ side of Donald Trump
This week I went on a strange trip, a pilgrimage to a place where common words and assumptions were flipped upside down and backward, where my vision blurred and I felt an unseen force trying to make my brain go stupid. I read “The Faith of Donald J. Trump,” just published. Its subtitle: “A Spiritual Biography.” What the hell, you say. But no, it’s real, and reasonably hefty, at 375 pages. Check the flap: The authors are David Brody, a reporter with the Christian Broadcasting Network, and Scott
March 5, 2018
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[Adam Minter] Killing junkies doesn’t work in Asia either
US drug dealers, beware. According to a recent report in Axios, President Donald Trump admires the freewheeling and brutal manner in which some Asian governments handle drug offenders. “You know, the Chinese and Filipinos don’t have a drug problem,” a senior administration official paraphrased Trump as saying. “They just kill them.” In one sense, Trump is right. Over the last two decades, Asia has executed a disproportionate number of drug suspects compared with the rest of the world. In the Phi
March 4, 2018
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[Leonid Bershidsky] Putin wants modern weapons, not a modern Russia
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday made clear his priorities for his next six-year presidential term: He spent about as much time talking about Russia’s new strategic weaponry as about all domestic policies put together. Revanche and confrontation continue to drive Putin’s agenda. In the meantime, he appears to believe that Russia’s internal problems will largely fix themselves if he sets ambitious enough goals. Putin’s two-hour speech was designed to double as an annual state of the n
March 4, 2018
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[Ana Palacio] Jean-Claude Juncker’s dangerous defense strategy
These days, there are just three events that bring together all of the main actors in international politics: the annual General Debate of the United Nations General Assembly, G-20 summits, and the Munich Security Conference. That makes it all the more disappointing that the latest MSC, which took place in mid-February, brought only one big idea – and not a good one.The MSC has long been a place not just to see and be seen, but also to hear and be heard. Yet, at this year’s meeting, what was not
March 4, 2018
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[Tim Duy] Trump’s trade policies could work against fiscal stimulus
The US government has set the stage for an economic experiment with its large, late-cycle fiscal stimulus, but the Trump administration’s trade agenda threatens to undermine the process as soon as it begins. Tax cuts and spending increases are projected to fuel an ill-advised federal budget deficit for 2019 in excess of $1 trillion. With the economy operating near full employment, the extra impetus from deficit spending could cause inflation to overheat. The Federal Reserve would respond with a
March 4, 2018
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[Ann McFeatters] Trump hands out jobs like mints to loyal friends
Hope Hicks, a former model who handled public relations for Ivanka Trump’s purses and shoes, is now Donald Trump’s longest-serving top aide, attending top-level White House decision-making meetings and crafting communications policy. She testified to Congress this week that she sometimes has been required to tell “white lies” as part of her job. The next day, she said she was resigning. Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law trying to figure out how to pay a balloon payment on a building he b
March 4, 2018
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[Tori K. Whiting] Five side effects of higher tariffs
It got relatively little attention at the time, but two proclamations that President Donald Trump signed in January could have a large effect on your wallet. The proclamations in question impose tariffs and quotas on imports of solar cells and modules, large residential washers, and washer parts. Solar cells and modules will see a tariff of 30 percent after the first 2.5 gigawatts. Washers will be tariffed at 20 percent for the first 1.2 million units, and then at 50 percent for all additional i
March 2, 2018
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[Noah Smith] Maybe cities don’t need tech hubs to succeed
There’s a standard playbook for reviving cities by turning them into technology clusters. But not every town can become the next Silicon Valley, or Robot City, or biotech mecca. Minneapolis has shown that there is another way. Cities such as Raleigh, San Diego and Pittsburgh have all followed a similar model: Build around a top-ranked research university; bring together elites from government, business, and academia; facilitate the sharing of ideas among campus labs, startups, and big companies;
March 2, 2018
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[Kim Kyung-ho] Political tone of trade protectionism
Mounting trade pressure from the US has prompted speculation here that Washington is linking trade issues to security concerns to keep in check what it views as President Moon Jae-in’s enthusiastic push for inter-Korean rapprochement ahead of the North’s denuclearization.Many commentators note South Korea is receiving the harshest treatment from the Trump administration, though its trade surplus with the US dropped significantly last year while the US’ imbalances with other major economies widen
March 1, 2018
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[David Ignatius] Crown prince performs shock therapy on Saudi Arabia
In a wide-ranging late-night interview at his palace in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia‘s young crown prince Mohammed bin Salman described a new wave of reforms as part of the “shock” therapy needed to modernize the kingdom’s cultural and political life.“MBS,” as the headstrong 32-year-old crown prince is known, began the conversation just before midnight Monday, at the end of a day that had brought new royal decrees shaking up the Saudi military and government bureaucracy and appointing a woman to a cabin
March 1, 2018