Seoul, South Korea-based Andrew Salmon, Asia Editor at The Washington Times. brings two decades of journalistic experience to the position. Before joining The Washington Times, he was Northeast Asia Editor of Hong Kong-based Asia Times. Andrew’s reporting previously appeared in The Daily Telegraph, Forbes, The International Herald Tribune, The South China Morning Post, The Times and The Washington Times. He has made television appearances on Arirang TV, CNN and France24. He can be reached at asalmon@washingtontimes.com.
North Korea's Kim Jong-un wants payback from Vladimir Putin for his troops' sacrifices in Russia's war against Ukraine -- something Moscow is moving belatedly to address, a leading expert said Tuesday.
South Korea's Constitutional Court has announced a ruling on the impeachment case against President Yoon Suk Yeol will be handed down at 11 a.m. local time Friday.
Stocks in auto export powerhouses Japan and South Korea both plunged Monday in anticipation of stiff new tariffs on Asian goods imported into the U.S. that are set to go into effect Wednesday.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un oversaw high-tech military developments on Wednesday and Thursday, as his huge, but old-fashioned, armed forces continue to climb the value chain.
South Korea's attention is shifting from the presidential impeachment crisis to an emergency that has killed 24 and is threatening one of the nation's top heritage sites.
South Korea's firebrand opposition leader, Lee Jae-myung, was legally cleared of wrongdoings Wednesday, clearing one hurdle to a potential bid for the nation's presidency.
A District Court in Tokyo ordered the Unification Church's operations in Japan to be dissolved on Tuesday in a move likely to ignite a major appeals battle and trigger condemnation from religious freedom advocates around the world.
Japan launched a new joint command structure for the country's armed forces Monday that is designed to address decades of inter-service rivalries and communications failures.
Prime Minister and acting President Han Duck-soo returned to work Monday after the nation's high court overruled his impeachment. But the eight judges of South Korea's Constitutional Court are still deliberating the fate of Mr. Han's boss, impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol.
Korea's political crisis, an ongoing struggle between a crippled executive and an empowered legislature, lurched further into uncharted territory Friday as the opposition proposed to impeach acting President Choi Sang-mok.
In an echo of U.S. warnings, Taiwan for the first time identified 2027 as the year that a potential Chinese invasion of the democratic island could be unleashed.
Former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte was arrested Tuesday morning on a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity committed during his deadly campaign against drug traffickers, the latest sensational turn in a political power struggle engulfing a key U.S. Pacific ally.
For the Trump administration, it was a duo of firsts on the Korean Peninsula on Monday: the first South Korea-U.S. joint military drills and North Korea's first missile barrage.
North Korean state media on Saturday released photographs of national leader Kim Jong Un inspecting progress on a "nuclear-powered strategic guided missile submarine."
In South Korea's latest shock political development, impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol was freed Saturday, a day after a Seoul court ordered the embattled political leader be allowed to await without being detained a Constitutional Court ruling on whether he should be removed from office.