South Korean President Yoon's recent declaration of martial law highlights the nation's political disfunction. Dr. Yul Sohn and Dr. Won-Taek Kang of the East Asia Institute reflect on the trends in ...
With the passing of “engagement,” the mood had darkened considerably in Seoul, mirroring a new, bellicose swagger evident ...
S. Korea had presidents in their 40s taking power through military coups, not democratic elections Rep. Lee Jun-seok of the ...
The jailed president Yoon Suk Yeol, who had been holed up in his presidential compound for weeks after issuing a martial law ...
President Yoon Suk Yeol will stand trial along with his former defense minister and others who participated in his ...
South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol tried to demolish his country’s democracy. In a shocking late-night television address, ...
As the rest of the world moves forward, South Korea is at a political stand still. The country needs strong leadership as ...
South Korean prosecutors have indicted the suspended ... he should take the opportunity to “arrest” a list of 14 political ...
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has become the country’s first leader to be indicted, less than two weeks after he was ...
Yoon and his legal team have repeatedly invoked far-right claims, without evidence, of a conspiracy between South Korea’s left-wing opposition and Pyongyang as they defend the president from criminal ...
National Assembly Speaker Woo Won-shik on Wednesday assured China that South Korea is swiftly recovering from political ...