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[James Stavridis] The Gaza peace plan will fail without US troops
When I led the US European Command from 2009 to 2013, Israel and the Levant were part of my geographic area of responsibility. I often went to Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, the West Bank and, yes, the Gaza Strip. It was a daunting part of my remit, and I sought advice from a longtime mentor: Henry Kissinger, who knew a thing or two about the Middle East. He gave me a great deal of advice, but one thing he said has really stuck with me — and I think is very much of the moment. “The key to understanding th
Oct. 21, 2025 -
[Sohn Jie-ae] Yeosu — the ocean at night
My family spent the long Chuseok holiday in Yeosu. The southeastern coastal city is not new to me. I remember the city decked out and festive while it hosted the International Expo in 2012. But after that visit, I had little reason to go back. Then, just a couple of years ago, I rediscovered Yeosu during an impulse trip to a newly opened hotel on the beach. And ever since, the city has become my favorite place to visit in Korea -- to drink in the energy of the spectacular jade-colored ocean that
Oct. 21, 2025 -
[Editorial] E-government holes
The e-government that South Korea has boasted is having a rough time. Serious holes came to light in the government computer network after a battery fire at the National Information Resources Service in September paralyzed electronic government services. The Onnara System, an online platform used by civil servants when they work, is said to have been hacked and data leaked for about three years. It is the first time that the system managed by the Interior Ministry was infiltrated. About 650 elec
Oct. 21, 2025 -
[Lee Kyong-hee] Gyeongju: Its golden splendor and scars
Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang Province, is a wondrous place resonating with history and culture. Once the capital of the ancient Silla Kingdom, it stands as a living museum of Korea’s cultural and spiritual heritage. Myth and truth intertwine in the countless monuments scattered across its landscape. Silla ruled for nearly a millennium, enjoying a golden age of prosperity and artistic brilliance, leaving behind treasures that still dazzle the modern eye. During its heyday, Gyeongju was home to near
Oct. 20, 2025 -
[Kori Schake] America's real enemy within
Since its founding almost 250 years ago, the United States has been uniquely fortunate that its military has never once become a threat to its democracy. But that could now change because President Donald Trump is trying to use the military as a cudgel against his political adversaries, whom he describes as “the enemy from within.” The American military hasn’t been pushed into partisan politics like this since at least the constitutional crisis of 1867, when President Andrew Johnson and the Repu
Oct. 20, 2025 -
[Editorial] The handcuffed generation
When 64 young South Koreans arrived at Incheon Airport in handcuffs on Saturday, the scene looked less like a crime roundup than a mirror held up to the nation’s quiet tragedy. They were not hardened criminals, but victims of a cruel equation: despair multiplied by debt, driven by the promise of “10 million won ($7,030) a month.” Their return from Cambodia, where they were detained for online scams, exposed not only the brutality of foreign criminal networks, but structural neglect that has left
Oct. 20, 2025 -
[Robert J. Fouser] Wave of Gen-Z protests and S. Korea
A wave of youth-led protests has swept across the globe in 2025, from the streets of Kathmandu to Rabat, Lima to Antananarivo. The rise of Generation Z-led protests across the Global South suggests that this generation is following in the footsteps of previous young generations, including those in South Korea, who took to the streets to demand political and social change. These demonstrations share common threads: demands for accountability, frustration with corruption and a generation’s refusal
Oct. 17, 2025 -
[Editorial] Collateral damage
China’s decision on Oct. 14 to bar transactions between Chinese entities and five US-based affiliates of Hanwha Ocean is a sharp escalation in the economic contest between Beijing and Washington. It also delivers a clear warning to Seoul. The Chinese Commerce Ministry justified the measure by saying the US affiliates “assisted and supported the US government’s Section 301 investigation” into China’s maritime and shipbuilding sectors. That is Beijing’s stated rationale — not an accusation about e
Oct. 17, 2025 -
[Editorial] Nobel laureates’ lessons
The 2025 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences went to three economists — Joel Mokyr at Northwestern University, Philippe Aghion at College de France and Peter Howitt at Brown University. They were honored as the prize recipients for their work on how innovation and the forces of "creative destruction" can drive economic growth. Their study was significant in that it has awakened people to the importance of innovation in the age of the "fourth industrial revolution," characterized by advance
Oct. 16, 2025 -
[Lee Jae-min] Just one task for APEC 2025
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation’s Economic Leaders’ Meeting is about two weeks away. Leaders of its 21 member economies are coming to Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang Province, for their annual gathering on Oct. 31 and Nov. 1. It will be a critical meeting at a critical time. Amid the global turmoil triggered by unprecedented trade and investment measures in 2025, both governments and companies worldwide are watching the upcoming APEC closely as the first multilateral trade event of the tumultuo
Oct. 16, 2025 -
[Wang Son-taek] Some signals from Pyongyang
A few days ago, North Korea held a grand military parade in Pyongyang to mark the 80th anniversary of the founding of the Workers’ Party of Korea. On Friday evening, tens of thousands of North Korean soldiers and civilians filled Kim Il Sung Square, moving in perfect formation despite the steady autumn rain. Such parades are typically designed to demonstrate the might of the North Korean military and to send deterrent signals to potential adversaries. However, this year’s parade carried far more
Oct. 16, 2025 -
[David Fish] Getting fired for social media posts
Americans think the First Amendment protects their speech. It doesn’t — at least not at work for most of us. Just ask the executives, teachers, lawyers and even a Secret Service agent disciplined after posting about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. A single Facebook update or tweet — whether mocking, angry or careless — can now end a career overnight. The line between our personal and professional lives has collapsed. Strangers online don’t just argue over posts they find
Oct. 15, 2025 -
[Kim Seong-kon] Korea reflected in Pak Kyongni’s 'Land'
Few Koreans are unaware of Pak Kyongni’s monumental epic novel “Toji,” or “Land.” It is an undisputed masterpiece that brilliantly depicts how the swift tide of sociopolitical disruptions can sweep everything away, and how tumultuous times affect the lives of ordinary people. In that respect, Pak Kyongni’s “Land” resonates with Margaret Mitchell’s “Gone with the Wind.” Written over 25 years, between 1969 and 1994, Pak’s “roman fleuve,” which consists of five parts and 16 volumes, portrays the co
Oct. 15, 2025 -
[Editorial] Productive longevity
South Korea has entered a demographic inversion that few advanced economies have faced so abruptly. As of the end of 2024, those in their 70s outnumbered people in their 20s. The milestone is more than a statistical curiosity; it exposes the structural limits of a labor market still built for a younger, expanding workforce. Unless the Korean government acts to turn longevity into a new source of growth, the country’s model — strained by a falling fertility rate and stagnating output — risks hard
Oct. 15, 2025 -
[Andrew Sheng] Six rules for new abnormal
In Hong Kong for the Asia Global Institute forum on Navigating the Tariff War, the consensus was that no one is immune to structural uncertainty where everything is happening all at once, with no one knowing what exactly comes next. Navigation is about planning and executing a journey, but you need maps, compasses and points of reference to know where you are and where you are going. Journeys across time and space need sound navigation, especially in troubled waters. Sailing is all about teamwor
Oct. 14, 2025