The nation’s top court unanimously upheld the impeachment of Yoon Suk Yeol, clearing the way for the election of a new president.
The events that triggered the ouster of South Korea’s president paralyzed state affairs—while delivering an intelligence windfall to the country’s archnemesis.
And no diplomatic maneuver is more quintessentially Kissinger than the U.S. opening to China in 1972. As great-power competition heats up again, today’s U.S. policymakers may be tempted to try to ...
The country’s Constitutional Court formally ended the presidency of Yoon Suk Yeol for declaring martial law, ending months of ...
With little commonality between the two factions, politics has metastasized into a winner-takes-all where, ultimately, both sides lose. Since democratization, four South Korean Presidents have been ...
South Korea’s Constitutional Court has unanimously removed Yoon Suk Yeol as president after he threw the nation into turmoil ...
The constitutional court unanimously voted to uphold Yoon Suk Yeol's impeachment, paving the way for a snap election within ...
South Korea's president has been removed from office after the Constitutional Court voted unanimously to uphold his ...
President Yoon Suk Yeol’s presidency crashed to an unprecedented end Friday, as South Korea’s Constitutional Court ...
President Yoon Suk Yeol was dismissed by South Korea’s Constitutional Court for his December 3 martial law declaration, which ...
The unanimous verdict capped a dramatic fall for Yoon, a former star prosecutor who went from political novice to president ...