Most Popular
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Ador CEO denies allegations, accuses Hybe of mistreating NewJeans
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Korea’s homegrown nanosatellite successfully launches into space
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[Herald Interview] 'Amid aging population, Korea to invite more young professionals from overseas'
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Nicaragua shuts down Seoul embassy
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Medical reform committee kicks off despite boycott from doctors
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Hybe's multilabel system tested amid conflict with Ador
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SNU profs to suspend treatment for one day
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Rocket engine expert, ex-NASA exec to lead Korea's new space agency
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SK hynix pledges W20tr to ramp up DRAM production at home
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10-man S. Korea lose to Indonesia to miss out on Paris Olympic football qualification
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[James Steinberg] Reassurance and resolve in East Asia
WASHINGTON, D.C. ― As territorial frictions involving China and many of its neighbors persist in the East and South China Seas, the United States needs a clearer regional strategy. America must simultaneously uphold its interests and alliance commitments and avoid counterproductive confrontation, or even conflict.Doing so will be difficult, especially because it is not clear whose claims to the region’s disputed islands and outcroppings should be recognized, and the U.S. has no intention of tryi
July 30, 2014
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Why Europe depends on America today
“The Great War” and “The war to end all war” proved to be neither. The conflict that would bleed to death some of Earth’s proudest empires ― while killing 16.5 million soldiers and civilians ― later would be christened World War I to distinguish it from the next, even deadlier slaughter. WWI also created a precedent and an image: If you wonder why Europe today relies on the U.S. and not, say, Brazil or China to help protect Ukraine, the answer traces back a century, to one battle in which Americ
July 30, 2014
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‘Black sites’ conspiracy became a black hole
“On the general issue of so-called black sites, we have not and will not confirm any purported locations. The overriding point, however, is that this program no longer exists.”That was the White House reaction, as it brushed aside questions about a landmark ruling by the European Court of Human Rights, one of the world’s preeminent human rights tribunals. The decision came last week in a case my colleagues and I brought against Poland, where our client, Abu Zubaydah, had been imprisoned and tort
July 30, 2014
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[Robert J. Fouser] Inequality and Korean dream
Talking to ordinary people is the best way to check the pulse of a nation. Last week, I was lucky to be able to take the pulse of Korea through long talks with friends who also happen to be ordinary people. The talks paint a picture of a nation deeply troubled by worry and self-doubt. Above all, the overwhelming message is that the Korean dream is slipping away.The Korean dream, like its counterparts elsewhere, is about opportunity and advancement. Opportunity comes through reforms that break do
July 29, 2014
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[Kim Seong-kon] Lament of a naive humanist
What is it that makes us human? What are the decisive differences between men and machines, or humans and animals? When someone is arrested for manufacturing unsanitary or hazardous food, he comes up with an excuse: “I had to make a living, didn’t I?” But in making that living, he could have killed so many people. It surely makes him a mass-murdering monster and a subhuman creature! He just does not know it. Two recent North American television series, “Being Human” and “Almost Human,” nicely de
July 29, 2014
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Containing Ebola requires a Team Africa
There’s a reason Ebola generates more terror than most viral illnesses: Doctors have no cure, and as many as 9 in 10 of its victims die. The only silver lining is that outbreaks have always been readily contained.Sadly, the new epidemic in Africa is another story. It has killed more than 650 people in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and shows no sign of abating. Last week, Sierra Leone’s top Ebola doctor became infected with the virus, and the first case was reported in Lagos, the continent’s
July 29, 2014
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Avoiding leftover mud in relations between Korea and Indonesia
On July 22, the Indonesian General Elections Commission announced Joko Widodo, popularly known as Jokowi, as the victor in Indonesia’s presidential elections. Jokowi, a former small businessman and currently governor of Jakarta, will assume the Indonesian presidency in October 2014. Two days later, President Park Geun-hye sent the Indonesian president-elect a congratulatory message. This would normally go unnoticed, if not for an unexpected event that briefly brought South Korea to the front pag
July 29, 2014
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Democracy’s appeal at stake in Indonesia
The dangerous stalemate in Indonesia’s presidential election may be resolved tomorrow, when official results are due. But it’s already having a destabilizing effect on another Southeast Asian island nation: the Philippines. As I wrote last week, Suharto-era General Prabowo Subianto still refuses to accept early indications that he lost the July 9 presidential election to Jakarta Governor Joko Widodo, who’s known as Jokowi. The world’s third-largest democracy is now holding its political breath t
July 29, 2014
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[Karen Brooks] Jokowi needs world’s backing
Democracy prevailed in Indonesia last week. Now leaders there and around the world must quickly get behind the country’s president-elect.After a tense two-week ballot recount in Indonesia’s closest-ever race for the top job, election officials declared the popular governor of Jakarta, Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, the winner in the July 9 presidential election.The world’s most populous Muslim country and 10th-largest economy, Indonesia is also the third-largest democracy, behind India and the United Sta
July 28, 2014
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Best thing for Malaysian Air may be to go bust
What a difference four months can make. In March, Malaysian leader Najib Razak was widely criticized for mishandling the search for a Malaysia Airlines jet that disappeared with 239 people on board. His government’s unsteady initial response to the Flight 370 tragedy deeply tarnished the Malaysian brand.Critics are seeing a very different Najib after Malaysian Air lost a second Boeing 777 on July 17: steady, circumspect and statesman-like. As world leaders bickered with President Vladimir Putin
July 28, 2014
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Gaza’s victims: civilians and peace
After more than two weeks of fighting between Hamas and Israel, there is no question which side has the upper hand. Thursday’s strike on a U.N.-run school for Palestinian children increased the Palestinian death toll to more than 760. By that point, the death toll on the Israeli side stood at 35, including a Thai worker in Israel.All but three of the Israeli deaths were soldiers. The U.N. estimates that 70 percent of the Palestinian dead were civilians. More than 120 were children ― roughly 16 p
July 28, 2014
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MH 17 crash a turning point in Ukraine?
It’s neither pleasant nor polite to say it, but the crash of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 may have been the best thing to happen to President Barack Obama’s policy on Ukraine in weeks.Until the plane went down with 298 passengers and crew last week, the nasty little war in eastern Ukraine had almost dropped from public view. Obama’s strategy of nudging Europe to escalate economic sanctions against Russia was getting nowhere, a victim of Europeans’ desire to protect their business with Moscow. Ukr
July 28, 2014
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[Park Sang-seek] Pope Francis as peacemaker
Since he became the pontiff, Pope Francis has become actively involved in world affairs and has made efforts to help solve international conflicts. He volunteered to play the role of a mediator between the leaders of Israel and Palestine; he implored Western leaders, particularly, the U.S. and Russian presidents, not to resort to force in the Syrian crisis; and he asked President Putin not to use military force in solving the Ukraine crisis. The world welcomes his initiatives but is divided into
July 28, 2014
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Keep Cold War buried
International outrage over the downing of a Malaysian passenger plane over Ukraine on July 17 does not appear to have affected either the actions of pro-Russia forces in that country or the material support Russia is offering the rebels. On Wednesday, the separatists apparently shot down two Ukrainian warplanes flying near the border with Russia. Then on Thursday, the U.S. accused Russia of firing artillery from its territory into Ukraine.If Russia continues to abet the Ukrainian armed resistanc
July 28, 2014
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[David Ignatius] In chaotic world, some optimism
WASHINGTON ― The world has been so chaotic lately that it was easy to overlook two U.S. diplomatic maneuvers ― involving the turbulent nations of Afghanistan and Iran ― that avoided what could have been dangerous ruptures. The architect of these two agreements was Secretary of State John Kerry, who these days seems to be in constant airborne mediation mode. In calmer times, Kerry would have made front-page headlines with his power-sharing pact in Afghanistan that defused talk of a possible civil
July 27, 2014
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Kerry makes dangerous rush to judgment again
Here we go again with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry leveraging a tragedy to make another “strong case” based on limited evidence. We have already seen this in the case of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and chemical weapons. Now it’s Russian President Vladimir Putin’s turn for the global smear treatment.Presumably we’re supposed to rush to adopt the notion that Russia’s fingerprints are all over last week’s downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 over Ukraine ― just as we were supposed to
July 27, 2014
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Liars, cheats and communists
Repressive political systems turn people into compulsive liars and crooks, and that legacy remains even after those systems are long gone, a recent study done in Berlin suggests. People growing up in market-based democracies are not necessarily naive, but when they come into contact with those of us born behind the Iron Curtain (or even to parents who hail from the former Eastern bloc), they are likely to encounter more duplicity and cunning than they’re used to.The study, conducted by Dan Ariel
July 27, 2014
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[John Kass] Illness threatens the best of barbecuers
This could be a terrifying tale right out of the Book of Meat Science Fiction, only this one isn’t fiction.It involves the elemental bond between humans and the critters we like to cook on a grill, or roast, or saute.But that could all end, because a tiny bloodthirsty bug known as the lone star tick carries something that can trigger a rare and mysterious meat allergy. And that allergy can cause carnivores to become violently ill when they come in contact with red meat.Symptoms include stuff I r
July 27, 2014
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Where are the ambassadors?
Next month the United States will host dozens of African leaders in Washington. But unless something changes before then, we will still be without confirmed ambassadors in 14 countries on the African continent, including in such strategically important nations as Niger, Cameroon and Sierra Leone.This is not only an embarrassment, it is a security issue. Yet nominations to fill the positions continue to be held up in the Senate for no good reason.As retired generals, we can testify to the importa
July 27, 2014
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[Robert Reich] The rise of the nonworking rich
In a new Pew poll, more than three-quarters of self-described conservatives believe “poor people have it easy because they can get government benefits without doing anything.” In reality, most of America’s poor work hard, often in two or more jobs. The real non-workers are the wealthy who inherit their fortunes. And their ranks are growing.In fact, we’re on the cusp of the largest intergenerational wealth transfer in history.The wealth is coming from those who over the last three decades earned
July 25, 2014