Most Popular
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Russia sent more than 165,000 barrels of refined petroleum to N. Korea in March: White House
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Key suspects grilled over alleged abuse of power in Marine death inquiry
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S. Korean children, teens grow taller, mature faster than before: study
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Army takes group action against Hybe for neglecting BTS
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[Graphic News] Number of coffee franchises in S. Korea rises 13%
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Marine Corps commander summoned by CIO for questioning on alleged influence-peddling case
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Some junior doctors are returning: Health Ministry
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[Robert J. Fouser] AI changes rationale for learning languages
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Ador CEO's request for exclusive right to terminate NewJeans' contract with Hybe refused in February
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Woman dangling from power lines rescued by residents holding blanket
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[Rachel Marsden] Long live airport security checks!
So Osama bin Laden’s dead. Now what? Things are going to change, but not in the way you might think.First off, the rest of the world isn’t going to fall over itself about this. Americans might be concerned about the collective yawn coming from Europe, but they really shouldn’t read too much into it. Europe just has a better historical perspective on these things. European leaders have been fightin
May 15, 2011
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Internet data collection: The privacy line
Apple introduced its Macintosh computer in 1984 with a now-famous Super Bowl commercial that showed a lone rebel striking out against Big Brother. So it was ironic that researchers recently accused the company of an Orwellian intrusion into consumer privacy: Its iPhones and iPads appeared to be tracking their users’ movements. Apple eventually offered a rebuttal, and it hustled out a software upda
May 13, 2011
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[Gregory Rodriguez] For Americans, to infinity and beyond
President Obama tried to use the announcement of the death of Osama bin Laden to get Americans to think big again. The successful end of a 10-year manhunt, he declared last week, was a “testament to the greatness of our country and the determination of the American people.”But bin Laden’s death instead seemed to feed stubborn domestic divisions and conjure thorny geopolitical stalemates. Maybe the
May 13, 2011
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[Dr. Noeleen Heyzer] Ending poverty in Asia-Pacific’s LDCs
For the people of Asia’s least developed countries ― the 14 poorest Asian countries and Pacific small island states ― the past decade was marked by multiple global economic crises and setbacks that prevented governments in each of the countries from succeeding in bringing their people out of extreme poverty. Despite some progress since 2001, the international development agenda for these neediest
May 13, 2011
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Pakistan and the U.S. need to work together
The language was a bit murky at first but inevitably the true nature of Pakistan-U.S. relations began to unravel. Immediately after the reported death of Bin Laden, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari would only speak in general terms about military and intelligence cooperation between the two countries, and would not go into specifics about the operation ― specifics that Islamabad didn’t have in
May 13, 2011
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Legal assistance for disaster victims
“I can’t repay loans for my house and fishing boat, which were swept away by the tsunami.”“I was fired by my company immediately after the disaster.”Day after day, these and other complaints are heard during legal consultations for people in areas devastated by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.Local lawyers associations have generously given counsel at evacuation centers and elsewhere. So have
May 13, 2011
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Pakistan’s proxy war against India
The involvement of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate in the 26/11 terror attack on Mumbai will be publicly aired in Chicago on May 16 when the trial of Hussain Rana of Pakistani origin, owner of an immigration consulting firm, begins. Six Americans were among 166 people killed in the Mumbai attacks. Though the 33-page charge-sheet does not mention ISI, it names Major Iqbal of the
May 13, 2011
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[Maria A. Ressa] Spreading jihadi virus in Southeast Asia
Osama bin Laden’s death is a moral victory, but it may turn out to be nothing more than that.Over the past decade, he has been isolated and the capabilities of his al-Qaida degraded, but the group has evolved into a social movement that continues to attract new groups and new recruits.Studies on social networks of al-Qaida and its Southeast Asian arm, Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), show that both organiza
May 13, 2011
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A dead Osama ― and what matters to whom
The security relationship between the United States and Pakistan is at risk of breaking down over the Osama bin Laden case. The U.S. would be disadvantaged in its Afghanistan withdrawal timetable and federal budget pruning if a rupture happened. Pakistan could as penance be made to take a cut in the $3 billion annual military aid it receives, but it will probably manage. Just how bad the relations
May 12, 2011
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Spending on luxury brands soaring in China
Our country has become a shining beacon of hope for luxury brands as Chinese consumers are driving the growth in many luxury sectors.As the luster of luxury fades in Japan, luxury brands are expanding their presence and retail locations in China.McKinsey & Co. estimates that the country’s luxury spending will more than double by 2015. If so, we will surpass Japan to become the world’s largest mark
May 12, 2011
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[David Ignatius] Bin Laden plot thickens in Pakistan
WASHINGTON ― The Pakistani town of Abbottabad seems to have been the perfect place to “hide in plain sight.” Not only did officers at the Pakistani military academy there apparently miss spotting Osama bin Laden. So did a team of U.S. Special Forces trainers that, according to Pakistani officials, was based there from September to December 2008. The “Where’s Waldo?” aspect of the hunt for bin Lade
May 12, 2011
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Make drug use pay its own way
In a far-off land called I’m Right, You’re Wrong, a fierce drug-legalization debate is raging. Half the people, libertarians, say drug use should be legal. The other half, moral purists, insist it shouldn’t.They disagree even on what to call it when those who buy or sell drugs are led off to jail. The libertarians call this a form of taxation ― specifically, a tax on the time of the buyer and sell
May 12, 2011
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[Zuraidah Ibrahim] A handful of issues for Singapore’s ruling party
The People’s Action Party’s (PAP) standard line that it starts preparing for the next general election the day after the last one ends has probably never been truer. Traditionally, a committee is formed to study voting patterns. This year, it will have its hands full divining why various precincts cast their ballots the way they did.On the one hand, there is bound to be a secular decline in suppor
May 12, 2011
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[William K. Black] Why CEOs avoided getting busted in meltdown
The defining characteristic of crony capitalism is the ability of favored elites to loot with impunity and the failure of regulators to do their jobs.We have seen this in the financial crisis that started in 2008 and in an earlier era, when the savings-and-loan industry collapsed.In the Texas “Rent-a-Bank” scandal of the 1970s, for example, two ringleaders created a fraud network of 50 lenders tha
May 12, 2011
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[Joel Brinkley] Bin Laden’s death a Rorschach test
The killing of Osama bin Laden is producing an unexpected outcome. His death is proving to be a Rorschach test for the entire world. Everyone who looks at it sees something different, sometimes betraying hidden motivations.Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, for example, has struggled since President Hosni Mubarak’s downfall to present a moderate image, while the group’s older leaders labor to mask the an
May 12, 2011
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[Pervez Hoodbhoy] Pakistan in the balance
The killing of Osama bin Laden could be a transformational moment for Pakistan and its military. The country has an opportunity now to decide whether it wants to decisively confront Islamist violence or face the consequences of the military’s current policy of giving support to jihadis with one hand even as it slaps them with the other. If Pakistan chooses this second path, it will be increasingly
May 11, 2011
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[Shahid Javed Burki] Bin Laden and the Afghan endgame
ISLAMABAD ― Osama bin Laden’s death will profoundly affect Pakistan’s relations with America. The death of al-Qaida’s leader deep in Pakistan, in a city with a heavy military presence, appears to confirm what many have long alleged: Pakistan, not Afghanistan, has become the epicenter of international terrorism.How will bin Laden’s death affect terrorist groups operating not only in Pakistan, but a
May 11, 2011
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[Ruben Martinez] Mexico’s drug war crossing the border
Last year I visited a friend of mine, journalist Raul Silva, in a working-class neighborhood of Cuernavaca. A popular destination for tourists and students of Spanish, the city, about 60 miles south of the Mexican capital, was on edge. Only a few weeks before, a drug gang had audaciously displayed its power, issuing a curfew one Friday night, warning that anyone out after 8 p.m. might be “mistaken
May 11, 2011
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[Amity Shlaes] Obama needs Navy SEALs to target budget
Obama pulls another Osama. He signs the orders. The operation succeeds. This time the target is another great enemy: the federal debt.Or so, at least, runs the national daydream.That Americans indulge themselves in such quirky fantasies reflects a desperation about reality. The reality is that in domestic affairs, President Barack Obama moves not like a leader who nailed Osama bin Laden, but like
May 11, 2011
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[Linda Yueh] Dilemmas facing the Bank of England
OXFORD ― Andrew Sentance, an outgoing member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, has outlined a credibility-challenging scenario for the BOE. There are two contradictory forces that could keep inflation significantly above its 2 percent target not only this year and next year, but even in 2013.The dilemma is that any depreciation of sterling increases the level of imported inflatio
May 11, 2011