Articles by 김케빈도현
김케빈도현
-
[John Kass] Hillary needs a long hard look in the mirror
Hillary Clinton’s political advocates -- I prefer “meat puppets” -- are wringing their hands over the Republican vulgarian Donald Trump.They’re upset over the boorish things he says about women, but, even worse, they’re anguishing over the death of American outrage.What bothers them is that anti-Trump outrage isn’t as widespread as the Clinton campaign hoped. And GOP Chairman Reince Priebus triggered them even more by suggesting that Trump’s character issues weren’t all that big a deal.This so e
Viewpoints May 24, 2016
-
[Anders Fogh Rasmussen] Make America trade again with courage
No matter how much some U.S. presidential candidates may deride free trade, it remains the backbone of the American economy. Without it, the country would become significantly poorer and its global influence would diminish significantly. So why has bashing free trade become a key theme in this year’s presidential race?One of the clearest reasons for this is that economic anxiety is widespread in the United States, which is still reeling from the aftereffects of the 2008 financial crisis. Too man
Viewpoints May 24, 2016
-
Why Vietnam and U.S. have reason to coordinate
All these decades after the Vietnam War, mentions of Hanoi or Saigon summon ghosts. That trauma will never be erased, but slowly, appropriately, it is being eased aside by the realities of a changing world.So it is that President Barack Obama goes to communist Vietnam early this week on a visit that is more about the future than the past. And as much about countering the rise of China as reframing U.S.-Vietnam relations.Obama will visit Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon). His trip is t
Viewpoints May 24, 2016
-
[Editorial] Parliamentary hearings
Relations are cooling rapidly between the presidential office and opposition parties following the passage last week of a bill enabling parliamentary committees to open hearings more frequently.The bill allows a committee to hold hearings on any matter under its jurisdiction if a majority of its members agree to do so. Up until now, a committee has only been able to resolve to hold hearings on “important” matters.The revision effectively enables the two opposition parties -- The Minjoo Party of
Editorial May 23, 2016
-
[Editorial] Jeju peace forum
Jejudo Island is best known as a resort island with many sites of scenic beauty and cultural importance. It attracts more than 10 million tourists from home and abroad every year.Yet the island has another aspect that is less well known to the public. Since the early 1990s, it has hosted many historic summits between Korean presidents and foreign leaders that have contributed to promoting peace on the Korean Peninsula and in Northeast Asia.Located at the center of the three key players of the re
Editorial May 23, 2016
-
[David Ignatius]Taking the fight to the Islamic State
BAGHDAD -- Amid hedgerows of computer screens in the joint operations center that runs the war against the Islamic State, Marine Brig. Gen. Bill Mullen explains the complex assault that drove the extremist fighters last week from the strategic town of Rutbah at the western edge of Anbar province. The battle showed how the campaign against the Islamic State, which has had a slow takeoff over the last 18 months, is supposed to work: In early May, a U.S. drone attack on a nearby highway killed Shak
Viewpoints May 23, 2016
-
[Aryeh Neier] Hiroshima With or Without Remorse?
The announcement that U.S. President Barack Obama’s visit to Japan later this month will include a stop in Hiroshima is welcome news. Of course, Obama will not apologize for America’s 1945 nuclear attack, which annihilated the city and instantly killed about 90,000 people (with many more dying later from the effects of radiation). Nonetheless, the visit will inevitably spur reflection and debate about what happened there and why.The main argument in favor of dropping an atomic bomb on Hiroshima,
Viewpoints May 23, 2016
-
[Eric Frazier] Wake me when this election is over
If I were still predigital enough to own a paper calendar, I’d circle Wednesday, Nov. 9, on it. Why? That’s the day after Election Day. The day when all the grown people of America who are losing their minds over politics can finally -- I hope -- begin to regain their sanity. The general election season has barely begun, but it seems like it’s already been going on for two years. Donald Trump’s relentless bloviating curdles forth on seemingly every news show. Hillary and Bill Clinton’s transgres
Viewpoints May 23, 2016
-
[Park Sang-seek] Korean Democracy at the Crossroads
In democratic countries the contest in politics mainly takes place between conservative and liberal forces. When the ideological spectrum in a democracy is divided into the conservative, moderate and liberal camps and power shifts from one camp to another smoothly, the country enjoys political stability. But if these three political forces either weaken or turn into extreme left or right forces, or become threatened by them, the country suffers from political turmoil.When the Republic of Korea w
Viewpoints May 23, 2016
-
[Editorial] Timely boost
One country after another is taking action to add pressure on North Korea which is under the toughest-yet international sanctions over its latest nuclear and missile provocations. Last week alone saw new actions taken by the European Union, Russia and Switzerland. They provide a timely boost to the international efforts to punish the rogue state, which -- through its Workers’ Party Congress earlier this month -- demonstrated its defiance against the U.N.-led sanctions. The latest action came
Editorial May 22, 2016
-
[Editorial] Greedy pigs
It is not rare for Korean tycoons -- especially those from family-run chaebol –- to be punished for their wrongdoings, ranging widely from embezzlement, operation of slush funds and tax evasion to bribery, offering illegal political funds and insider trading. Of these, the last one -- illegal stock trading utilizing insider information -- has come to the fore again recently in the wake of two prominent cases, which, once again, showed how greedy and shameless some of the wealthy in this country
Editorial May 22, 2016
-
[Jeffrey Robertson] South Korea’s diplomatic style on the world stage
At the end of this year, Ban Ki-moon will leave the office of United Nations secretary-general. Since January 2007, he has crossed the globe building support to address the challenges of development, climate change, conflict, and humanitarian crises. Despite early criticisms, he has dutifully fulfilled a role that the Second Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld labeled “the most impossible job on earth”. As a career diplomat and former foreign minister, he has also broadcast to the world South Kor
Viewpoints May 22, 2016
-
[Mark Davis] Conservatives who oppose Trump need to wise up
In a hazardous year for political predictions, I’ll offer one confidently: if the Republicans currently freaking out over Donald Trump can redirect that energy toward beating Hillary Clinton, she’s toast. But that is a giant “if.” Many conservatives need to examine what keeps them mired in their objections to Trump now that the Republican primary race is over. During that race, it was proper to weigh his pluses and minuses versus the competition. Maybe his inconsistent conservatism made some peo
Viewpoints May 22, 2016
-
[James Gibney] Did bombing Hiroshima save Japanese lives?
“Yoshikado-sensei said, ‘They’re still there. Spear them! Spear them!’ and it was really fun. I was tired, but I realized that even one person can kill a lot of the enemy.”So wrote Mihoko Nakane, a 10-year-old Japanese girl, in her diary in July 1945. She was describing the hand-to-hand combat training she and her classmates were getting for the “decisive battle” to be fought if and when the U.S. and its allies invaded mainland Japan.It’s one of many sobering vignettes recounted in Samuel Yamash
Viewpoints May 22, 2016
-
[Seamus Hughes] The path to radicalization
As one father told me the story of his daughter’s radicalization, his every word was heavy with regret. He should have intervened earlier, he said, when he first noticed she was hiding her online conversations from him. When his daughter disappeared, he frantically tried to call her. But it was too late; she’d gone to Syria to join the Islamic State. Now she is among the 250 individuals who have attempted to or succeeded in traveling to Syria or Iraq to join terrorist organizations such as the I
Viewpoints May 22, 2016
Most Popular
-
1
Actor Jung Woo-sung admits to being father of model Moon Ga-bi’s child
-
2
Wealthy parents ditch Korean passports to get kids into international school
-
3
First snow to fall in Seoul on Wednesday
-
4
Trump picks ex-N. Korea policy official as his principal deputy national security adviser
-
5
Man convicted after binge eating to avoid military service
-
6
S. Korea not to attend Sado mine memorial: foreign ministry
-
7
Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
-
8
Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
-
9
Toxins at 622 times legal limit found in kids' clothes from Chinese platforms
-
10
Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips