Most Popular
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Yoon's approval rating plunges to all-time low
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S. Korea votes in favor of Palestinian bid for UN membership
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Russia's denial of entry of S. Korean national unrelated to bilateral ties: Seoul official
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Bae Doo-na shares portraying Korean identity in Hollywood's 'Rebel Moon'
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[From the Scene] Monks, Buddhists hail return of remains of Buddhas
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Medical schools granted enrollment quota flexibility for next year
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Yoon offers first one-on-one meeting with opposition leader next week
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Korean art gets spotlight at Venice Biennale 2024
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Iran fires air defense batteries in provinces as sound of explosions heard near Isfahan
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France rejects opening Paris flight routes to T'way Air, deals blow to Korean Air merger
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[Stephen Carter] Google do-gooder discount leaves churches to beg
I am not sure what exactly led Google Inc. to decide to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible by making it harder for religious groups to do their work. But that is the practical effect of a set of changes in pricing policies adopted by the tech giant this year. Until recently, Goo
Sept. 18, 2011
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[David Ignatius] Israel and the Arab street
WASHINGTON ― The expanding confrontation between Israel and its neighbors has been described variously as a “train wreck,” a “lose-lose situation” and a “political tsunami.” It’s all those things, and likely to get worse: For there’s no quick fix by Israel’s ally, the United States. The Obama a
Sept. 18, 2011
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Euro bonds won’t cure what ails Europe
In recent weeks, euro bonds have gained traction in policy circles as the solution to the sovereign-debt crisis. The proposed debt could be structured in different ways, but in all cases it would imply joint and severally issued obligations by the members of the euro zone and would fundamentally cha
Sept. 18, 2011
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[Meghan Daum] Save the nation ― buy now
Remember the famous Stanford marshmallow study of 1972? It asked children at a campus nursery school to choose between eating a marshmallow (or a cookie or a pretzel, depending on their preference) right away or waiting while the researcher stepped out of the room for a period of time, at which poin
Sept. 18, 2011
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[Peter Singer] Can we increase happiness?
PRINCETON ― The small Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan is known internationally for two things: high visa fees, which reduce the influx of tourists, and its policy of promoting “gross national happiness” instead of economic growth. The two are related: more tourists might boost the economy, but they woul
Sept. 18, 2011
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[Jonathan Weil] European bank blowups hidden with shell games
The last time the world had a major banking crisis, fair-value accounting rules were near the top of the list of scapegoats most likely to be denounced by government and industry leaders. Not so this go-around. Today many of Europe’s largest financial institutions are seemingly on the brink again, d
Sept. 16, 2011
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[Robert Reich] Perry’s plan to help blue states
Of all the nonsense Texas Gov. Rick Perry spews about states’ rights and the 10th amendment, his dumbest is the notion that states should go it alone. “We’ve got a great Union,” he said at a Tea Party rally in Austin in April 2009. “There’s absolutely no reason to dissolve it. But if Washington cont
Sept. 16, 2011
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Japan’s new trade chief must act on nuke issues
Former chief Cabinet secretary Yukio Edano was named economy, trade and industry minister Monday to succeed Yoshio Hachiro, who resigned over insensitive remarks and actions toward disaster-hit areas.Edano served as secretary general of the Democratic Party of Japan and chief Cabinet secretary under
Sept. 16, 2011
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No end in sight 10 years on
Ten years after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the United States, people still remember the collapse of the two World Trade Center towers. But the world has changed in those 10 years. The 9/11 attacks have greatly changed the Middle East, the U.S. and even the world. But it’s hard to tell who has
Sept. 16, 2011
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Burma is not changing enough for recognition
The speech by Burmese Foreign Minister U Wunna Muang Lwin to the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva earlier this week was very impressive. He discussed at length the progress his country has been making since the new government under President Thein Sein was formed in March. He said Burma
Sept. 16, 2011
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[Frank Ching] As China rises, so does fear
The latest issue of Foreign Affairs magazine carries an article on the inevitability of China becoming the next superpower, one of a mounting cascade of articles on America’s decline and China’s rise. For many Chinese, it is high time for their country to regain its rightful place in the world,
Sept. 16, 2011
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[Editorial] Abandoning principle?
In his confirmation hearing on Wednesday, Unification Minister-nominee Yu Woo-ik said he would exercise “flexibility in methodology” in relations with North Korea while maintaining a “principled approach” to them. In making this remark, did he mean to be deliberately ambiguous or did he have a probl
Sept. 15, 2011
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[Shahid Javed Burki] The war on terror is most costly for Pakistan
ISLAMABAD ― The 9/11 terrorist attacks in the United States sent shock waves around the world from which Pakistan has still not recovered. Indeed, Pakistan’s participation in what former President George W. Bush called the “global war on terror” has produced overwhelmingly negative consequences, as
Sept. 15, 2011
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[Joel Brinkley] Durban III set for Islamophobia
Scores of states are meeting at the United Nations later this month for a hatefest that promises to be so odious that a dozen Western countries, including the United States, have already announced that they will not attend.It’s called Durban III, the third iteration of a conference first held in Sou
Sept. 15, 2011
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Boomers turn conservative as they grow old
Baby boomers who came of age during the social and political upheavals of the 1960s and 1970s tended to call themselves Democrats, and as time passed, that identification strengthened. In 1969, far more in the 18- to 29-year-old age cohort ― the front end of the baby boom ― called themselves Democra
Sept. 15, 2011
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[Trudy Rubin] War on terrorism a phantom
Did we win the war on terrorism?Ten years after 9/11, Osama bin Laden is dead, and al-Qaida is fractured. There’s been no second attack (although intelligence chatter has picked up possible threats during anniversary commemorations).So people ask: Did we win?Not really. What we’ve won is hard knowle
Sept. 15, 2011
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[Park Sang-seek] Ideological polarization in capitalist democracies
After the cold war ended, the ideological conflict between East and West ended and the wind of democracy blew in the East and the South, but history has not ended. Instead, the North-South divide which had already emerged in the cold war period has become more serious and a new grand debate on the c
Sept. 15, 2011
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[Omar Ashour] Long journey from 9/11 to the Arab Spring
CAIRO ― Al-Qaida’s operating environment today is vastly different from the one in which it launched its most notorious operation, the 9/11 terror attacks. Osama bin Laden, al-Qaida’s founder and charismatic leader, was killed by United States Navy Seals in Pakistan in May. Three brutal Middle East
Sept. 14, 2011
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[David Ignatius] The payoff of quiet leadership
WASHINGTON ― Barack Obama got elected president in part because he promised to change the foreign-policy priorities of a Bush administration that was unpopular abroad, had strained relations with key allies and was facing a growing Iranian challenge and a continuing menace from al-Qaida. So wha
Sept. 14, 2011
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[William Pesek] Obama’s soul mate down under may be down
It’s as predictable as political leadership gets: When things go awry at home, escape overseas for a while, grip and grin with a foreign head of state and change the subject. Barack Obama may have this tried-and-true strategy in mind as he plans to visit Australia, which is about as far as a U.S. pr
Sept. 14, 2011