Sign in Welcome! Log into your account your username your password Forgot your password? Get help Create an account Create an account Welcome! Register for an account your email your username A password will be e-mailed to you. Password recovery Recover your password your email A password will be e-mailed to you. President Lee of South Korea Visits D.C. 151 June 16, 2009 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Published in Korea Times (South Korea) on by (link to originallink to original) Translated from by . Edited by . Back To Origin This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link . Tags:South Korea Hot this week Block titleFeaturedAll time popularMore Turkey: Trump’s Peace Is Stillborn Due to Netanyahu, the Midwife November 24, 2025. Published in Daily Sabah 0 Palestine: Peace: Rest in Peace November 28, 2025. Published in alquds“The Palestinians like me. The Palestinians are doing very well actually.” 0 India: Between ‘Communist’ Mamdani and ‘Despot’ Trump, the Common Ground Is the City November 24, 2025. Published in The Indian Express 0 Ghana: Will America’s Absence from the G20 Summit in South Africa Affect Key Decisions? November 25, 2025. Published in GhanaWeb 0 Iraq: The Anxious America: When Fear Becomes a Component of Political Awareness November 27, 2025. Published in alsabaahThis contradiction between fearing violence while simultaneously rejecting it defines the current American mood. 0 Topics Cuba: Life in Venezuela Has Not Stopped November 29, 2025. Published in Juventude Rebelde[T]hreats from Washington may have strengthened a sense of unity and sovereignty among citizens who want peace. 0 India: A Tenuous Truce: Can the Updated US-Ukraine Peace Plan Actually End the War? November 29, 2025. Published in FirstpostMoscow’s objective remains a final settlement on its own terms—not a temporary ceasefire or frozen conflict. 0 South Africa: How Revoking Naledi Pandor’s US Visa Was Engineered November 29, 2025. Published in Cape TimesThe question we therefore need to ask is who is next? 0 Saudi Arabia: A Tale of Two ‘Virtual’ Ceasefires November 29, 2025. Published in Arab News 0 Palestine: Peace: Rest in Peace November 28, 2025. Published in alquds“The Palestinians like me. The Palestinians are doing very well actually.” 0 Iraq: The Anxious America: When Fear Becomes a Component of Political Awareness November 27, 2025. Published in alsabaahThis contradiction between fearing violence while simultaneously rejecting it defines the current American mood. 0 Austria: Trump’s Double Failures November 27, 2025. Published in Der StandardThe first cracks are appearing in the MAGA movement, which has long been drunk with power. 0 Spain: Marco Rubio: Semiotics of the ‘Bully’ November 27, 2025. Published in La JornadaRubio represents a function: that of translating the doctrine of interventionism into everyday language. 0 Related Articles South Korea: Trump Halts Military Aid to Taiwan, and It Concerns Us, Too September 25, 2025. Published in HankookilboAs part of the Indo-Pacific Strategy, Taiwan is vital for the United States to contain China. India: Trump’s Tariffs Have Hit South Korea and Japan: India Has Been Wise in Charting a Cautious Path July 9, 2025. Published in The Indian ExpressU.S. companies, importers and retailers will bear the initial costs which most economists expect to filter through the supply chain as a cost-push inflation. Hong Kong: China, Japan, South Korea Pave Way for Summit Talks; Liu Teng-Chung: Responding to Trump April 5, 2025. Published in China Review News[T]he U.S. has continued to use tariffs and economic stimulus plans to solve its domestic economic woes. South Korea: Where Is the War in Ukraine Heading? September 30, 2024. Published in The Korean TimesThe many billions of dollars that have been flowing into Ukraine from Europe, the U.S., and elsewhere have been crucial. Zimbabwe: China Is the True Power in Putin and Kim’s Budding Friendship June 25, 2024. Published in NewsDayXi is already under considerable pressure from the U.S. and Europe to cut support for Moscow. Previous articleRoad to RecoveryNext articleObama Has No Easy Task LEAVE A REPLY Cancel replyLog in to leave a comment