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'I just can't leave now': Trump shelves summit with North Korea's Kim Jong Un until after the midterms

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trump kim singapore

  • President Donald Trump says he's shelving the idea of a second summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un until after the midterm elections.
  • "I just can't leave now," Trump said to reporters on Tuesday.
  • The November election is expected to a pivotal moment, both in Trump's presidency and in both the Senate and the House of Representatives., because Democrats could flip a number of seats currently held by Republicans, potentially reclaiming the majority.
  • Trump had positive words about Kim after his June summit with the North Korean leader in Singapore. The president said the second meeting could happen at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

President Donald Trump says he's shelving the idea of a second summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

"It'll be after the midterms," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Tuesday. "I just can't leave now."

The November election is expected to a pivotal moment, both in Trump's presidency and in both the Senate and the House of Representatives., because Democrats could flip a number of seats currently held by Republicans, potentially reclaiming the majority.

Earlier on Tuesday, Trump touted what he called "incredible" progress on US-North Korean relations, as evidenced by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's recent trip to Pyongyang — his fourth trip since becoming secretary of state.

Pompeo said Kim would allow international inspectors to observe Punggye-ri, a North Korean nuclear test site; and the Sohae missile engine test facility "as soon as we get it logistically worked out."

"You got no rockets flying, you have no missiles flying, you have no nuclear testing," Trump said at the White House. "We've made incredible progress — beyond incredible."

"But I have agreed to meet," Trump added. "We have a very good relationship with Chairman Kim. I like him, he likes me, the relationship is good."

Trump held his first meeting with Kim in Singapore on June 12, marking the first summit between a sitting US president and a North Korean leader. While Trump described Singapore's summit as "great," he floated the possibility of hosting the second meeting in the US, including his Mar-a-Lago estate.

"He'd probably like that," Trump said of the idea. "I'd like that, too. I think it would be good. But we'll see. We're talking about three or four different locations. Timing — won't be too far away."

"I don't want to embarrass anybody by asking," Trump added. "I think eventually we're going to have lots of meetings on US soil and on their soil, by the way."

SEE ALSO: 16 pictures show North Korea's grand performance at the Mass Games, where South Korea's president gave his first speech directly to North Koreans

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Kim Jong Un again clowns the Trump administration — this time with a new Rolls Royce Phantom

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kim jong un rolls royce skitch

  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has again made a mockery of the US's policy towards Pyongyang when meeting with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, this time with a new Rolls Royce Phantom.
  • The US has tried everything in its power to restrict the flow of luxury goods to North Korea, but Kim showed the Trump administration they failed.
  • Last time Pompeo went to North Korea, Kim ditched him and instead toured a potato farm. 

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has again made a mockery of the US policy towards Pyongyang when meeting with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, this time in decidedly flashy style.

When Pompeo arrived in North Korea in July to follow up with Kim after President Donald Trump's historic summit in Singapore, Kim outright ditched the US's top diplomat. 

Pompeo was reportedly promised a meeting with Kim in July, but no such meeting took place. Instead, photos showed Kim touring a potato farm.

This time, when Pompeo visited in early October, Kim did show up and the two appeared friendly as the leader arrived and shook Pompeo's hand.

But Kim had just stepped out of a new looking Rolls Royce Phantom. The large "R" emblem on the large, chrome rim struck an unmistakable image before Pompeo. 

Rolls Royce, of course, is a British luxury car maker, and North Korea remains under heavy US sanctions that strictly forbid the sale of luxury goods to the country.

During the summit in June, Kim was seen in a Mercedes-Maybach Pullman Guard armored limousine flanked by security running alongside on foot. 

The Trump administration maintains it's made good progress on getting North Korea to denuclearize despite no verifiable actions towards this taking place. A key point in the administration's defense of its North Korea diplomacy is that sanctions remain in place and that the Kim regime continues demilitarization talks with South Korea.

But increasingly North Korean ships have been spotted at foreign harbors, which the UN sanctions forbid. China and Russia have reportedly increased trade with the country since the summit, and now South Korea has started providing more aid and discussing removing sanctions.

By showing up in a new Rolls Royce Kim managed to mock Pompeo and the Trump administration's attempts to isolate North Korea. 

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Lesley Stahl confronts Trump on Kim Jong Un 'love': 'He presides over a cruel kingdom of repression, gulags, starvation ... slave labor, public executions'

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  • President Donald Trump says he "trusts" North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, despite the fact that "nobody really knows" if the regime is actively building up its weapons arsenal. 
  • During an interview with CBS' 60 Minutes which aired Sunday night, interviewer Lesley Stahl pressed Trump over his relationship with Kim in the months since their June summit. 
  • "I do trust him," Trump said. "That doesn't mean I can't be proven wrong." 
  • Trump also said that he and Kim have "good chemistry" together. 
  • Trump added that he is not easing sanctions on North Korea, despite the regime's continued appeals.

President Donald Trump says he "trusts" North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, despite the fact that "nobody really knows" if the regime is actively building up its weapons arsenal. 

During an interview with CBS' "60 Minutes" which aired Sunday night, interviewer Lesley Stahl pressed Trump over his relationship with Kim in the months since their June summit. 

"We were going to war with North Korea. Now, you don't hear that," he said, boasting of the progress made with Kim since their initial meeting. "And he doesn't wanna go to war, and we don't wanna go to war, and he understands denuclearization and he's agreed to it. And you see that, he's agreed to it. No missiles," he said.

"I do trust him, yeah, I trust him. That doesn't mean I can't be proven wrong," Trump added. 

When asked about reports that Kim appeared to be continuing to build up his weapons arsenal despite pledges to denuclearize and ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula, Trump came to the young leader's defense.

"Nobody really knows. I mean, people are saying that. I've actually said that," he said.

"In the meantime, they haven't tested a missile. They haven't tested a rocket. They definitely haven't done a nuclear test because you know about them real fast. It sort of moves the earth. And we have a relationship now."

Stahl also pushed Trump to elaborate over his previous statements in which he claimed that he and Kim "fell in love" through their correspondence.

Stahl stressed that Kim has been widely criticized for the cruel treatment of his people, 10% of whom have been forced into modern slavery used to prop up the repressive regime, and many of whom live in extreme poverty.

"He presides over a cruel kingdom of repression, gulags, starvation … slave labor, public executions," she said.

"This is a guy you love?" she asked Trump. 

"Sure. I know all these things. I mean, I'm not a baby. I know these things," he responded, growing increasingly impatient. "That's just a figure of speech." 

"Let it be whatever it is. I get along with him really well. I have a good energy with him. I have a good chemistry with him.' he said. 

Still, Trump said he is not easing sanctions on North Korea, despite the regime's continued appeals.

North and South Korea are currently holding high-level talks at the "truce village" along the country's border to discuss implementing a peace agreement between Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-In. 

Moon told a French newspaper on Sunday that Kim is "sincere" in his promise to give up the country's nuclear weapons, and urged the international community to "reward" him for his efforts. Still, the US has said it is waiting for concrete action, including the "permanent" and "irreversible" dismantling of North Korea's nuclear facilities, before the US would concede.

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'It's a tough year': Read the full transcript of Trump's interview with the Associated Press

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  • President Donald Trump discussed a wide range of topics during an interview with the Associated Press on Tuesday.
  • Trump drew parallels between Judge Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation process and the recent controversy surrounding Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi's disappearance.
  • When asked about Michael Cohen, his longtime personal attorney, Trump accused Cohen of lying under oath.
  • Trump said he didn't see any formidable challengers from the Democratic Party ahead of the 2020 US presidential election.

A transcript of an Oval Office interview Tuesday with President Donald Trump by AP White House reporters Catherine Lucey, Zeke Miller and Jonathan Lemire. Portions of the interview were redacted due to off-the-record comments.

___

President Donald Trump: How is the business of the news? We’re keeping you busy?

AP: Yes, sir, you are.

AP: Thank you for doing this.

Trump: What are you going to do in 6½ years with a normal boring person here?

AP: It has certainly been a busy two years.

Trump: It’s going to be different, going to be different.

AP: We’re hoping to cover a lot of topics today, but before we get started on some other things, we want to talk news of the day first. Obviously, the Saudis and the missing writer. AP is reporting that police searching the consulate found evidence that Jamal Khashoggi was killed there. What did the crown prince tell you today, exactly, and what is your intelligence telling you?

Trump: Well, I just put this out, I guess you saw it. I just have it here. I spoke to the crown prince, so you have that. He said he and his father knew nothing about it. And that was very important. And I spoke to him with Mike Pompeo there. And the crown prince. I spoke to the king yesterday, the crown prince, today wanting to know what was going on, what was happening, and he said very strongly that he and his father knew nothing about it but they are starting a major, they’ve already started a major investigation to find out. And so the answers will be forthcoming.

AP: Did they raise this idea of rogue killers in any of those conversations?

Trump: Well, the concept of it, I guess. Yesterday, when I spoke with the father, not so much today, but when I spoke to the father, it just sounded to me like he felt like he did not do it. He did not know about it and it sounded like, you know, the concept of rogue killers. But I don’t know. I think the investigation will lead to an answer. And they’re going to do a very thorough investigation. I believe they’re working with Turkey.

AP: But he didn’t bring up that? That was something you came up with after the conversation?

Trump: Just the concept of it. No, that was just from my feeling of the conversation with the king, not with the crown prince but with the king.

AP: Do you believe, sir, do you believe the king and the crown prince? I mean do you find them ... do you find them sort of trustworthy here? And there’s been a lot of talk, including from Sen. Graham, who I know is an ally of yours in many ways, that this is the moment that perhaps the U.S. relationship with Saudi Arabia should be re-evaluated, that things should be done differently going forward. What do you think of that?

Trump: Well, I think we have to find out what happened first. You know, here we go again with, you know, you’re guilty until proven innocent. I don’t like that. We just went through that with Justice Kavanaugh. And he was innocent all the way. So I was unconcerned. So we have to find out what happened and they are doing a very major investigation. So is Turkey. Plus, they’re putting themselves together and doing it. And hopefully they’ll get to an answer as to what happened. But I will say they were very strong in their denial about themselves knowing.

AP: Did they give you any sense of the timetable?

Trump: I would say within a week. That’s my impression. He said two weeks. But they’re going to try and do it in less than a week.

AP: So moving to the midterms, you’re hitting the road for Republicans, obviously.

Trump: A little bit.

AP: And the White House political office has said, and you have said, that Republicans face headwinds this fall, it’s a tough year for Republicans historically. If Republicans were to lose control of the House ...

Trump: It’s a tough year ... The midterms are very tough for anybody the opposite of president, for whatever reason, nobody has been able to say.

Trump campaign

AP: So my question is, if Republicans were to lose control of the House on November 6th — or a couple of days later depending on how long it takes to count the votes — do you believe you bear some responsibility for that?

Trump: No, I think I’m helping people. Look, I’m 48 and 1 in the primaries, and actually it’s much higher than that because I endorsed a lot of people that were successful that people don’t even talk about. But many of those 48, as you know, were people that had no chance, in some cases. We look at Florida, you look at Donovan in Staten Island. He was losing by 10 points, I endorsed him and he won. I could give you a long list of names. Look at Georgia governor of Georgia. And many, many races. And I will say that we have a very big impact. I don’t believe anybody’s ever had this kind of an impact. They would say that in the old days that if you got the support of a president or if you’ve got the support of somebody it would be nice to have, but it meant nothing, zero. Like literally zero. Some of the people I’ve endorsed have gone up 40 and 50 points just on the endorsement.

AP: Eight years ago, Barack Obama said he got shellacked, so you know, taking the outcome of the election as a referendum on himself.

Trump: So I think we’re going to do well. Look, it feels to me very much like ’16. I was going out and making speeches and I was getting tens of thousands of people. And I was getting literally tens of thousands of people, also, more than Hillary in the same location. And I said, ‘Why am I going to lose?’ I mean, I go out, I make a speech like I have, you know, 25 times more people than she gets. And I didn’t need Beyonce to get them. I didn’t have to have, you know, entertainment and entertainers to get them. And then they’d all leave before she made the speech after the entertainer was finished. Honestly, it feels very much like it did in ’16.

Now, I’m not sure that that’s right. And I’m not running. I mean, there are many people that have said to me, ‘Sir, I will never ever,’ you on the trail when I’m talking to people backstage etcetera, ‘I will never ever go and vote in the midterms because you’re not running and I don’t think you like Congress.’ Well, I do like Congress because I think, and when I say Congress I like the Republicans that support me in Congress. We’ve had tremendous support. I mean, we’ve got the taxes with 100 percent Republican votes and we don’t really have much of a majority. You know when you say majority, I always say, ‘If somebody has a cold, we have to delay the vote.’ So I get along, you know, very ... people have no idea how low how well I get along with Republicans in Congress. I get along well with a lot of the Democrats in Congress, but I’ll never get their vote.

Brett Kavanaugh Trump

AP: You just mentioned Justice Kavanaugh. And I know, we’ve all been to your rallies, and you’ve suggested that fight was as hard as ...

Trump: I will say, that fight because he was treated so viciously and violently by the Democrats. That fight has had an impact on energy, and it’s had an impact on the Republican Party, a very positive one in terms of getting out and voting. I think, but I’ll let you know in three weeks.

AP: Along those lines, in the days before the actual vote was held, former President George W. Bush made a number of calls of senators also sort of lobbying on Kavanaugh’s behalf. Does he deserve any of the credit here? Have you spoken to him, have you given him a thank you for that?

Trump: I did speak with him, I did. No, I didn’t say thank you, per se. But I did speak to him before it and we had a great conversation about Kavanaugh, what an outstanding person he is, which is what he told me. And we had a very pleasant conversation, a very good conversation.

___

AP: There are a number of phone calls that you got from folks in that critical period. Did you hear from anyone who serves in the Supreme Court who serves alongside now, the justice?

Trump: No, I didn’t. Nobody called from the Supreme Court. It’s a very august body. It’s a group of people that, once you’re elevated to that level, you really tend to be in a different place, in a different world. No, I didn’t, I never got a call. As an example, I did not get a call from Justice Gorsuch, who would be the most likely, or Justice Thomas. Or Alito. I’ve got no calls.

AP: Are you prepared for what will happen to your presidency if the Democrats do take back the House?

Trump: Sure.

AP: How will you handle investigations, impeachment prospects?

Trump: I think I’ll handle it very well. I’m handling already. We have a witch hunt now going on, and I handle it very well, and there was no collusion. Everyone knows it. It’s ... People laugh. People are laughing at the concept of it.

AP: What if they go after your tax returns? Is that something that would ...

Trump: They have to do whatever they do, and I’ll do whatever I do. But I’ve had the most successful two years. I would say, without question, first two years of office, I’ve had the most successful two years in the history of this country as a president. And we’re not even close, actually, if you think about it. It’s not until Jan. 20 so we’re not even really close to two years. And, would get me the list? Would you get me the list, please?

AP: Do you think you have the legal team necessary?

Trump: I have the most successful. Nobody has done what I’ve done, and nobody has come close in the first two years of office. And that’s despite the fighting, the Democrats’ obstruction.

Unidentified: I have extra copies ...

Trump: Here, these are just some. I just put them down rough. But take a look at that. You all set?

AP: Yeah, yeah.

Trump: I mean, you go point after point, each point is a major event, but you just take a look. Confirmed more circuit court judges than any other new administration. Soon it will be than any administration in history. Who is the one, who’s the one president that percentage-wise has done better than me? There’s only one. George Washington — 100 percent.

(Laughter)

Trump: Nobody has gotten that yet.

AP: That is a good piece of trivia. On another topic: Michael Cohen was your personal attorney for many years. He testified under oath in federal court that you directed him to commit a crime. Did you, sir?

Trump: Totally false. It’s totally false.

Michael Cohen

AP: So he’s lying under oath?

Trump: Oh, absolutely he’s lying. And Michael Cohen was a PR person who did small legal work, very small legal work. And what he did was very sad, when you look. By the way, he was in trouble not for what he did for me; he was in trouble for what he did for himself. You do know that? Having to do with loans, mortgages, taxicabs and various other things, if you read the paper. He wasn’t in trouble for what he did for me; he was in trouble for what he did for other people. He represented me very little. It’s a very low level. And what he was is also a public relations person. And now if he wants to try and get a little bit lighter sentence for what he did ... Totally uninvolved. I wasn’t involved and he had other clients, No. 1. And No. 2, he was a contractor to a large extent. But Michael Cohen, if you take a look at what he did, this had to do with loans, and I guess the taxi industry is something that I have nothing to do with, he did this on his own time.

Go ahead.

AP: You were tweeting today about Stormy Daniels ...

Trump: I won a case yesterday, a big case. They sued. Got thrown out. And not only did they get thrown out, but I get legal fees, which is quite unusual, because the case is so obnoxious and so wrong. And I give tremendous credit to the judge. And not only that, we go by Texas law. Texas law says you get every penny that you spent. Texas law is very tough for the legal fees.

AP: Sir, as the president of the United States, is it appropriate to call a woman, and even one who is making serious allegations and who you are in litigation against, to call her a horseface?

Trump: You know what? You can take it any way you want.

AP: How should we take it?

Trump: Did you see the letter? She put out a letter. I had nothing to do with her. So she can lie and she can do whatever she wants to do. She can hire a phony lawyer. You take a look at this guy, a stone-cold loser. Take a look at his past. They can say anything about me. I’m just saying, I just speak for myself. You take a look, and you make your own determination.

AP: There’s two cases with Stormy Daniels aside from the one yesterday that the judge invalidated, but the hush-deal case continues. Did you ask the lawyer to invalidate the agreement?

Trump: Well, you’d have to speak to the lawyers. I don’t even know what the lawyers are doing, but they are very good lawyers. They’ll figure it out.

AP: In your interview with ’60 Minutes’ over the weekend, you were asked about climate change, and you said you believe it, but that also, it could go back. And one of the things ... (crosstalk)

Trump: I said the worst hurricane was 50 years ago, far worse than what this one was. Then, in 1890, they had one that was even worse. This was No. 3 or 4 or 5. We had worse hurricanes in 1890, we had worse, a worse hurricane 50 years ago. We’ve gone through a period, actually, fairly recently, where we have very few. I live in Florida to a large extent and spend a lot of time in Florida, and we had a period of time where we went years without having any major problem. And then you have a problem and it goes in cycles, and I want absolutely crystal clear water and I want the cleanest air on the planet and our air now is cleaner than it’s ever been. Very important to me. But what I’m not willing to do is sacrifice the economic well-being of our country for something that nobody really knows. And you have scientists on both sides of the issue. And I agree the climate changes, but it goes back and forth, back and forth. So we’ll see.

I mean, you know, I am a person that believes very, very strongly in the environment. I am truly an environmentalist. I know some people might not think of me as that, but I’m an environmentalist. Everything I want and everything I have is clean. Clean is very important — water, air. But I also want jobs for our country. And if we would have, as an example, entered certain agreements with other countries, I actually think that we’re doing it so they could have an economic advantage. Because we would have had a tremendous— we would have been at a tremendous economic disadvantage if we entered into certain agreements.

AP: But scientists say this is nearing a point where this can’t be reversed.

Trump: No, no. Some say that and some say differently. I mean, you have scientists on both sides of it. My uncle was a great professor at MIT for many years. Dr. John Trump. And I didn’t talk to him about this particular subject, but I have a natural instinct for science, and I will say that you have scientists on both sides of the picture.

OK, what’s next?

rod rosenstein jeff sessions

AP: Sir, you mentioned, you mentioned more than once that your inclination is not to interfere with the Department of Justice as the special counsel probe continues.

Trump: Well, the probe is ridiculous. OK. That that probe was even started. Jeff Sessions should have never recused himself. He did it for ... and he did it immediately. He should have told me that. And he recused himself. And even people that are not my friends say that was a horrible thing that he did to the president, a horrible thing. He should be ashamed of himself for doing it. He should have told me that beforehand. And if he would have told me that beforehand, I probably would have put somebody else in the Department of Justice. But Jeff Sessions should never have recused himself.

AP: I mean, you can fire him now. Would you want to do that? Will you do that?

Trump: I haven’t said I was going to fire him or not.

AP: You could, I’m saying.

Trump: I could fire him whenever I want to fire him, but I haven’t said that I was going to.

AP: Why don’t you, sir?

Trump: I just haven’t said I was going to fire him. We’ll see what happens. But if you ask me: Am I thrilled? No, I am not thrilled.

AP: You’ve said in the past, also, on the probe, that you felt like there were certain lines that it shouldn’t cross. How concerned would you be if it perhaps crept close on targeting your family, perhaps your eldest son?

Trump: Well, I can say this. I knew nothing about the meeting that you’re talking about. My son’s a good young guy. He did what every other person in Congress would do if somebody came up to them, said, ‘Hey, I have information on your opponent.’ I don’t know of any politician. And I think I can speak for the people in this room that would have said, ‘Oh, gee, information on my opponent and it’s bad information?’ Name me a politician that would have turned that down. There is no such thing as that kind of a politician. So that’s what they heard. They heard it was about Hillary Clinton. They had a meeting or he had a meeting with some people. The meeting became about a different subject and they couldn’t get out of the meeting fast enough.

Now here’s the important thing. After the meeting, nothing happened. It was like, ‘Hey, let’s get together next week. Let’s get together tomorrow. Let’s get together.’ Nothing happened out of that meeting. Absolutely nothing. He did absolutely nothing wrong. And there’s nobody harder on my son than I am. And I would tell you, the press has made a fake news deal out of that meeting. If he did something wrong, I would have been livid. I could never really blame him because I’ve had people come up to me, senators. I’ve had a lot of political people say, ‘Your son didn’t do anything wrong. That was just a meeting. It was called oppo research.’ A lot of the politicians would call it opposition research. There was nothing wrong with that. But here’s more important. Nothing from the day of that meeting. It ended. And if you listen to people, it sounded like it ended like they couldn’t get out fast enough. There was nothing wrong with having an opposition research meeting and nothing happened from the meeting. If that meeting went, ‘Oh, let’s have another meeting next week or let’s have a meeting tomorrow or let’s start doing this or that or a hundred different things,’ that’s different. That’s totally different depending on what they were going to do. But nothing happened.

AP: The special counsel has submitted written questions to your lawyers. Have you read those questions? Have you been involved in drafting the response?

Trump: I won’t respond, but you’re right — we are looking at certain questions having to do with the word collusion. Of course there was no collusion. So we are looking at that, and we’ll make a determination.

AP: Would you prefer to have an in-person interview or do it this way?

Trump: We’ll see how that works out. You know that’s in process. It’s a tremendous waste of time for the president of the United States. To think that I would be even thinking about using Russia to help me win Idaho. We’re using Russia to help me win the great state of Iowa or anywhere else is the most preposterous, embarrassing thing. And I will say that the Democrats know it and they wink. They’re all laughing. And you know if I often hear that Russia likes to sow discord. The word is sow, an old English term. They like to sow chaos and discord. Well, if that’s the case, you gave it to them on a silver platter because this is ridiculous. This was an excuse made by the Democrats for the reason they lost the electoral college, which gives them a big advantage — a big advantage. Very different than the popular vote. The popular vote would be much easier to win if you were campaigning on it. You know, it’s like running the 100-yard dash versus a 10-mile run. You train differently. Nobody explained that to Hillary Clinton, by the way. Someday she’ll figure it out. But winning the electoral college is a tremendous advantage for the Democrats. And this was an excuse for how they lost the election. How they lost an election they should have won. And one of the reasons they lost because I happened to be a great candidate. And another reason they lost is that Hillary forgot to campaign in Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania and I guess she needed a lot more time in North Carolina, a lot more time in South Carolina and a lot more time in a place called — a beautiful, sunny, wonderful place— called Florida.

AP: If I could turn to immigration and the families separated at the border.

Trump: Sure.

AP: There are children who have now been reunited with their families who are now showing signs of trauma from their separation experience.

Trump: By the way, many of the children — and this is unfortunate, I covered it so nicely on ’60 Minutes,′ but they only put on pieces of it, and they were fine but you know they cut, cut, cut because I guess they have so much time, although I heard that they did very nicely on the show. Did they do well?

AP: They just put out some ratings.

Trump: So congratulations to them, but I wish they would have left the entire answer. When people enter our country illegally, there are consequences to pay. But despite the consequences, you have many children that, sadly, are there without parents. Then you have people that grab children and use them as a prop and it’s a disgrace. And they come in with a child and they don’t even know who the child is five hours before. And that’s a shame. That’s a terrible thing what they do.

migrant family reunited texas

AP: There are also children whose parents have been deported.

Trump: They take children and they use them to try and come into our country. There are many, many bad things going on on the border. We have the worst laws in the history of the world on immigration, and we’re getting them changed one by one. We’ve made a lot of progress in the last couple of weeks even, but we’re getting them changed one by one. But you have children that we’re taking care of, that don’t even have parents at least anywhere within hundreds of miles of the border, and we’re taking those children, caring for those children, and in many cases sending them back to their parents in countries where their parents didn’t even make the journey up with them, incredibly. And some of those children are really young. And we are, actually, in fact, today there was a beautiful statement put out by the Washington Examiner congratulating us on the great job we do with children. Now President Obama had the same law; he did the same thing. And, in fact, the picture of children living in cages that was taken in 2014 was a picture of President Obama’s administration and the way they handled children. They had the kids living in cages. They thought it was our administration and they used it and then unbeknownst to them and the fake news, they found out, ‘Oh my God, this is a terrible situation.’ This was during the Obama administration.

AP: Do you have any regrets or any remorse about how this has impacted children, though?

Trump: Here’s the thing. I think we’ve done an incredible job with children. As I just said, we’ve taken children who have no parents with them standing on the border. We’ve taken many children, and I’m not talking about a small percentage, I’m talking about a very large percentage where they have no people, no parents. In addition to that, we’re separating children who are just met by people that are using them coming into the border, not their parents. They are using them coming into the border. The one thing I will also say is that when a person thinks they will not be separated, our border becomes overrun with people coming in. So that’s another problem. With all of that being said, we’re getting the laws changed so that catch and release, so that visa lottery, so that chain migration and every other form of incredible stupidity can be taken out of our system.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders: I’ll send you guys the DHS report that has the numbers that show that, like, 75 percent of the kids were actually self-separated. Their parents chose to go back and signed the paperwork to leave their kids behind.

Trump: The parents would sometimes come up with their kids, leave them at the border and go back. So we’re in this position where we have an innocent young child at the border; there are no parents. We take them in, we care for the child and then we get horrible publicity. We should be getting great publicity, and the Washington Examiner did a great piece today on the fact that we’ve done a great job. And President Obama had the same law. And, by the way, he separated children and there are many pictures of jail cells where the children were separate from the parents.

___

Trump: We should be getting credit for the job we’ve done.

US Army soldiers fire a Howitzer at Seprwan Ghar base in Kandahar province, Afghanistan in 2016.

AP: Turning to foreign policy, you ran the campaign on bringing American troops home and the America First policy.

Trump: Yes.

AP: But today there are more American troops serving in Afghanistan and in Syria and Iraq, in Africa, in harm’s way than when you took office. How do you explain to people at home?

Trump: The main thing I have to see is, I have to see safety at home and — not a vast difference, by the way — but a little bit more. But it’s not a lot more, it’s a little bit more. I have to see safety at home. And if I think people are likely to do some very bad things in faraway places to our homeland, I’m going to have troops there for a period of time. But we’ve done an excellent job. We’ve defeated ISIS. ISIS is defeated in all of the areas that we fought ISIS, and that would have never happened under President Obama. In fact, it is going the other way. And I think we fought extremely effectively on everything I’ve wanted to do. Now there will be a certain point where that takes place.

AP: John Bolton, though, told us, told my colleague Jon a couple of weeks ago that troops aren’t going to come out, aren’t going to leave Syria, until Iran is fully out of Syria.

Trump: We’re going to see what happens. We’re going to see what happens. I want, No. 1, the safety of our country. And if that means knocking the hell out of them, of terrorists, long before they can ever get here, that’s OK with me. And if I could help Europe and other places by doing it, that’s OK with me. And they’re starting to pay us for that, by the way, much more substantially than they ever paid before. You understand that’s an important thing because it’s unfair that the burden is all on us. As it has been. But we are ... we’ve made ... we’ve had tremendous success there. We’ve had tremendous success in North Korea, tremendous success in North Korea.

___

AP: On the subject of American soldiers and military overseas, why have you not yet visited a military base in a combat zone like in Iraq and Afghanistan?

Trump: Well, I will do that at some point, but I don’t think it’s overly necessary. I’ve been very busy with everything that’s taking place here. We have the greatest economy in the history of our country. I mean, this is the greatest economy we’ve ever had, best unemployment numbers. Many groups are, you know, we’ve never even been close to these numbers. I’m doing a lot of things. I’m doing a lot of things. But it’s something I’d do. And do gladly. Nobody has been better at the military. Hey, I just got them a pay raise. I haven’t had a pay raise in 11 years. I just got them a substantial pay raise. ‘They’ meaning our military people. I just got them new equipment. They have stuff that was so old that the grandfathers used to fly it. I have done more for the military than any president in many, many years.

___

trump kim singapore

AP: Can you give us any update as to the plans for your next meeting with Kim Jong Un?

Trump: Yeah, we will have one, but it is going to be after the midterms because I want to stay around here.

AP: Will it be here, in the United States, sir?

Trump: I want to stay around and help people get elected.

AP: Do you think that meeting would be here? In the U.S.?

Trump: No, I don’t think so. I mean, we haven’t set it up yet, but I would think not yet. At some point, that will happen, too.

AP: You saw the numbers, the coverage in the last couple of days about deficits. That the projected deficit is a trillion dollars. You railed on President Obama over deficits.

Trump: Excuse me. No. 1, I had to take care of our military. I had no choice but to do it, and I want to take care of our military. We had to do things that we had to do. And I’ve done them. Now we’re going to start bringing numbers down. We also have tremendous numbers with regard to hurricanes and fires and the tremendous forest fires all over. We had very big numbers, unexpectedly big numbers. California does a horrible job maintaining their forests. They’re going to have to start doing a better job or we’re not going to be paying them. They are doing a horrible job of maintaining what they have. And we had big numbers on tremendous numbers with the forest fires and obviously the hurricanes. We got hit in Texas, Florida, Puerto Rico, Georgia. Georgia was hit very hard this time. Nobody even, you know, treats that one fairly. The farmers got hit very, very hard.

AP: Mitch McConnell said he wants to consider entitlement reform.

Trump: Wants to consider what?

AP: Entitlement reform — changes to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid.

Trump: That I haven’t heard.

AP: OK.

Trump: I haven’t heard that. I’m leaving Social Security. I’m not touching Social Security.

AP: I know we are quite short on time. We were looking to do kind of a lightning round.

AP: You’ve spoken about security clearances. Do you have any plans to take any more clearances away any time soon?

Trump: Yeah, I do.

AP: From whom?

Trump: People I don’t trust.

AP: Any updates on the White House counsel?

Trump: Yes. I’ve made a decision. He’s ... you’ve been reading a little bit about it. A very fine man, highly respected by a lot of people: Pat (Cipollone).

AP: And for the U.N. perm rep? For Ambassador Haley’s job? Have you made a decision?

Trump: I have many people that want the job. I have such a good relationship with Nikki. And I’ve talked to her about it, too. I will be talking to her about it. But I have many people that want the job, and I would say I’ll be making that decision over the next week or two. They’re going to work with Nikki for a little while. She going to go till the end of the year, and they’ll be working with Nikki.

Seattle Seahawks kneeling

AP: You’ve been very critical, the last year or so, of the NFL. This year, actually, rating are up a little bit. What do you make of that? What does that say about ...?

Trump: Hey, look, I did the NFL a big favor. You know that, right?

AP: By calling attention to it?

Trump: No. You didn’t know this? You didn’t know this?

AP: Tell us, sir.

Trump: So the NFL was having a tremendous problem with Canada on the Super Bowl and advertising and all sorts of things — very complicated subject. And in about two seconds, I got, in about 30 seconds, I got that one fixed up for the NFL. They’re going to make a tremendous amount of additional money because of what I did for them. It was a favor for them and it wasn’t for NFL, it was that this is a great American company. I was negotiating against Canada. And one of the things, I said ‘I want the NFL fixed,’ because it had to do with them keeping revenues from advertising and for not allowing the NFL to advertise in Canada. And it was very unfair and everybody knew that and Canada knew it, too. And Canada plays a very tough game. So I said I want that fixed and nobody wrote a story about it because why would they ever write about it? And, by the way, Commissioner Goodell called me last week and he, ‘thank you very much.’ But I settled that for the NFL. It took me literally about a minute because that’s a small deal compared to the big deal. And Canada knew it was the right thing to do. So I helped a great American corporation. You have to understand, I like the NFL. I want the NFL to do well. I have many friends that are in the NFL, owners and others. I want them to do very well. I also want them standing for the American flag, not kneeling, but I just helped the NFL settle a problem that they couldn’t settle for 15 years or something. This has been going on, a vicious battle with Canada, for years. I settled it. And not one person has written about it. Why don’t you call what you call Commissioner Goodell and ask him. Roger. He called me last week. I thought he was calling me about the flag to say ‘ceasefire.’ But he didn’t. He called me just to thank me, and I said, ‘That was very nice.’ It was a very nice phone call. You should do something about it if you want.

Paul Manafort

AP: Do you plan to pardon Paul Manafort?

Trump: Who?

AP: Paul Manafort.

Trump: I never even was asked about it. I haven’t thought about it. But, you know, I think it’s a very sad, sad situation. And there’s another thing that had nothing to do with me. That was from years before. You do understand that, right? Do you understand that? Do you know these Russian hackers you’re talking about from Moscow? They have nothing to do with me. How many people are they? Only 28 people? They have nothing to do with me. They were hackers from Moscow. Some of them supported Hillary Clinton. They had nothing to do with me. You look at all the stuff, it’s just nothing to do with me.

AP: Knowing what you know today, is it still appropriate for Secretary Mnuchin to be going to Saudi Arabia next week?

Trump: Well, it depends on what we find out over the next couple of days. He doesn’t have to make that determination until Friday, and I think we’ll also be guided by what other countries are doing. You know, we’ll look at that.

AP: What’s your responsibility?

Trump: I do think this. I do think that they have ordered billions, one of the largest military orders in the history of the country. I think that we hurt ourselves far more than we hurt Saudi Arabia when we cancel an order like that.

AP: You’ve seen American business leaders, though, pull out of that conference. Do you endorse that move?

Trump: Too early to say. I have to find out what happened. Once they find out what happened, I’ll be able to tell you exactly.

AP: Would you only serve one term, Mr. President, if you felt like you had done everything you set out to do?

Trump: No. Because the other term ... first of all, there’s always things to do. Actually, it’s a very nice question because I have done so much. People have said that, ‘You’ve done so much. You may have it all put back together. And our country: Make America Great Again.’ And they do ask me that question. So if you do all of the things that you’re doing and you’re given another two years, which is a lot of time because I’ve done this in far less than two years, and those papers pretty much say it, they do ask that question. There’s always something to do. And you know, the new motto is Keep America Great. I don’t want somebody to destroy it because I can do a great job. But the wrong person coming in after me sitting right at this desk can destroy it very quickly, if they don’t do the right thing. So no I’m definitely running.

Joe Biden

AP: Is there someone in particular you’d like to run against?

Trump: So far, all of them. So far, all of them. I don’t see any talent. No talent.

AP: No one you’re worried about?

Trump: I see no talent.

AP: Vice President Biden? Or Sen. Warren? Or anyone?

Trump: Well, Biden ran twice and actually a lot of people think he really ran a third time, but he was so low in the polls that he never registered. But he ran twice. And I call him One Percent Joe because you know he did very poorly and then Obama took him off the trash heap and made him vice president. And in a sense he did a good job as vice president, in my opinion, because Obama liked him, and if President Obama didn’t like him, you would have been hearing about it. So in that sense, he, I think, he did actually a nice job because the president of the United States felt very comfortable about him. Like, I like my vice president very, very much. That’s an important function.

AP: Thank you very much, Mr. President.

Trump: Thank you all.

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North Korea says it has 'successfully' tested a new 'high-tech tactical weapon'

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Kim Jong Un

  • North Korea's state-run media outlet said on Friday that its country successfully carried out a test of a new "high-tech tactical weapon" that met "all superior and powerful designing indicators."
  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited a test site to inspect the weapon, according the Korean Central News Agency.
  • High-ranking officials were also said to have attended the event, include Jung Cheon Park, an artillery commissioner.

North Korea's state-run outlet said on Friday that its country successfully carried out tests of a new "high-tech tactical weapon" that met "all superior and powerful designing indicators."

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited a test site to inspect the weapon, according to a Korean Central News Agency statement first reported by South Korean news organization Yonhap News.

"The state-of-the-art weapon that has been long developed under the leadership of our party's dynamic leadership has a meaning of completely safeguarding our territory and significantly improving the combat power of our people's army," KCNA said.

The weapons test is the first reported by North Korea since Kim and the President Donald Trump met during a joint summit in Singapore this summer.

North Korea's media reportedly did not mention any specifics about the weapon itself, but did state it had been in development since his father, Kim Jong Il, was in power. High-ranking officials were also said to have attended the event, include Jung Cheon Park, an artillery commissioner.

Signs of an underground nuclear test, such as seismic activity, were not reported, according to North Korea monitoring organization NK News.

Read more:Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un meet for the first time in historic Singapore summit

The report of the weapons test comes shortly after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was supposed to have met with his North Korean counterpart, Kim Yong Chol, in New York earlier in November. The talks were scrapped abruptly by the North Koreans, according to the State Department. The government agency says the discussions are ongoing.

Word of the weapons test comes amid the reaffirmation of a potential second summit between Trump and Kim. On Thursday, Vice President Mike Pence said Trump plans to meet Kim next year, the second such meeting after the two met in Singapore in June.

"The plans are ongoing," Pence said. "We believe that the summit will likely occur after the first of the year, but the when and the where of that is still being worked out."

Pence added that the meeting would not be predicated on the US' previous demand that North Korea disclose a full list of nuclear arms, but he stressed that the leaders must "come away with a plan for identifying all of the weapons in question."

SEE ALSO: 3 South Korean firms will plead guilty to rigging fuel prices at US military bases, says DOJ

DON'T MISS: Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un meet for the first time in historic Singapore summit

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North Korea to deport US citizen it says the CIA manipulated as it claims new 'high-tech tactical weapon'

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Kim Jong Un

  • North Korea on Friday said it was deporting a US citizen who entered the country illegally in October.
  • The announcement came after the rogue state claimed it had "successfully" tested a new high-tech weapon. 
  • The detained American was identified as Bruce Byron Lowrance.
  • Lowrance's deportation is seemingly designed to appease the US government, even as North Korea continues to take provocative military actions amid ongoing talks with the US about denuclearization. 

North Korea on Friday said it was deporting a US citizen who entered the country illegally in October. The announcement came as the rogue state also claimed it had "successfully" tested a new high-tech weapon. 

The detained American was identified as Bruce Byron Lowrance by North Korean state news, which also claimed he'd been under the "manipulation" of the CIA and entered the country via China, The New York Times reported.

It's not clear when Lowrance will be deported. 

North Korea has detained Americans for long periods of time, infuriating the US government in the process. The most well-known case is perhaps that of Otto Warmbier, an American student who died last year shortly after being released from North Korean custody. Warmbier had been in captivity for roughly 17 months. 

Read more: North Korea says it has 'successfully' tested a new 'high-tech tactical weapon'

The deportation of Lowrance is seemingly designed to appease the US government, even as North Korea continues to take provocative military actions amid ongoing talks with the US about denuclearization. 

President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un met in Singapore over the summer to discuss Pyongyang's nuclear program. Roughly two months before their landmark summit, Trump secured the release of three US citizens who were held captive by North Korea. 

Trump has maintained that North Korea no longer poses a nuclear threat, but critics feel he's embellished the success of his dealings with Kim and been too amicable toward a leader who is widely considered among the most oppressive worldwide. The UN's nuclear watchdog in August said North Korea was continuing nuclear activity.

Earlier on Friday, North Korea said it carried out successful tests of a "high-tech tactical weapon" that state news described as "state-of-the-art."

Read more: North Korea is hiding a vast network of secret missile bases in the mountains, satellite images show

Trump and Kim are set to meet for a second time, which Vice President Mike Pence discussed on Thursday. Pence said the US would not require Pyongyang to provide a complete list of its nuclear weapons and missile sites prior to the meeting. The US has been demanding this information for some time, but North Korea has been obstinate. 

Pence told NBC News that "it will be absolutely imperative in this next summit that we come away with a plan for identifying all of the weapons in question, identifying all the development sites, allowing for inspections of the sites and the plan for dismantling nuclear weapons." 

"Now we need to see results," Pence added.

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Cuba and North Korea are supposed to share values, but they have totally different ways of treating children

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North Korean Children

  • Cuba and North Korea are supposed to share values as socialist republics. And yet their brands of socialism are worlds apart.
  • One profound difference is how they treat their children. In Cuba, children are the most valued and protected members of society.
  • In North Korea, children face an Orwellian nightmare. North Korean children are taught they're replaceable, disposable, and ultimately worthless.

The Conversation

Kim Jong Un, North Korea's tyrannical leader, recently "reaffirmed historic ties" with Miguel Diaz-Canel, Cuba's president.

Diplomacy between Cuba and North Korea is odd. Late Cuban president Fidel Castro only once visited Kim Il Sung, North Korea's eternal leader, in 1986.

While he spoke highly of some aspects of the regime, Kim's cult of personality, for Castro, went too far. He saw the forced worship of Kim Il Sung as smacking of Stalinist brutality, not socialist progress.

Cuban schoolchildrenThe friendship between Kim and Diaz-Canel is worrisome. While US President Donald Trump's "casino diplomacy" with Kim Jong Un came as a result of an escalating security crisis, Cuba and North Korea are supposed to share values as socialist republics. And yet their brands of socialism are worlds apart.

One profound difference is how they treat their children.

In Cuba, children are the most valued and protected members of society. Access to food, health, education, stable families, and even culture, sport, and play are venerated foundations of Cuban society.

Read more: Defector shot 5 times while escaping says 80% of younger North Koreans aren't loyal to Kim Jong Un

In North Korea, children face an Orwellian nightmare. North Korea is in a league of its own when it comes to the abuse of children.

So much divergence calls into question how the Cubans can maintain solidarity with a country that abhors Cuba's core values.

Belittling, intimidating kids

The Korean Children's Union, a mandatory union for children aged nine to 15, is not designed to nurture or inspire its members through friendship, camaraderie, or duty. It is meant to belittle, to intimidate, and to instil the belief that the supreme leader is all-powerful.

Children in North KoreaIt rigorously instructs children that to be an individual is meaningless. No child is unique. Each one is just like the other. Replaceable, disposable, and ultimately worthless.

Don't be fooled by photos of Kim Jong Un smiling arm and arm with ecstatic children. Childhood in North Korea is rife with hunger, fear, and abuse.

From the testimony of numerous defectors, we know that children are taught by the government to love the supreme leader more than their own parents. Mom and Dad are responsible for the basics, but it is the leader who provides in every way. Sound like a cult? It is.

Read more: 19 pictures that show how images of the Supreme Leaders are plastered absolutely everywhere in North Korea

Juche is North Korea's official ideology meant to drive the nation towards true socialism. It demands obedience, submission and designated struggle for the benefit of the nation. It creates a deranged cult of personality of the Kims to convince children not to think for themselves, but to think "through the leader."

It begins with nursery rhymes. Many give fawning praise and boisterous credence to Kim Il Sung, the eternal leader of North Korea, along with his direct descendants Kim Jong Il and Kim Jong Un. Yet other songs are chock-full of lyrics about killing "Japanese dogs" and dismembering "American bastards."

The worship of one man

In their earliest days of song and speech, children learn to worship one man, prepare for revenge against the country's enemies and abandon the sanctity of childhood — all through a barrage of violence and vulgarity.

For those deemed "wavering" or "hostile" by the North Korean government, which categorizes citizens based on political loyalty, the psychological abuse intensifies.

While still forced to show audacious affection to the Dear Leader, teachers and police remind children that their only value in life will be service to the leader through exhausting work.

Kim Jong Un ChildrenFor the lowest rungs of society, childhood turns to horror. Food is minimal and malnutrition rampant. Stories emerge of roving children near the Chinese border who, abandoned by their parents, live a roaming existence in collectives in search of food and warmth.

One child was found crossing the Chinese border in the middle of winter with terrible burns to his bare feet. Trying to stay warm, he knocked over a kerosene lamp that ignited his shoes. Such are the brutal sacrifices of young people, shunned by their nation and forgotten by the world.

Read more: A photographer captured these dismal photos of life in North Korea on his phone

Defector testimony presented to the United Nations Commission of Inquiry into Human Rights Abuses in North Korea include stories of male and female political prisoners, some with no previous contact, forced into conjugal visits while in captivity.

North Korea demands three generations of punishment for those hostile to the regime. If a child is born into this plight, they will live a life starved and physically worked to absolute exhaustion in the camps.

Robbed of humanity

North Korea's abuse is systematic, with dangerous implications for enduring trauma at the very genesis of childhood. Weaponizing youth through mandatory juvenile conscription goes beyond violating international edicts. It robs its children of humanity.

It is not done by accident, nor by consequence of a catastrophic event. Dehumanizing compatriots, including children, is a carefully scripted policy. Bureaucrats engineer it, soldiers implement it, and Kim Jong Un oversees it with impunity.

North Korea militarizes children through conformity, intimidation, and degradation. Meanwhile, Cuba is committed to ensuring the rich experiences of childhood. Diplomatic protocol aside, for Cuba to hold hands with the leader of a nation that denigrates children to such levels is repugnant.

The Korean Children's Union, and other tenets of Juche, must be dismantled if North Korea is to enter the global community. North Korea's closest allies, including Cuba, have a role in making sure that happens.

SEE ALSO: A photographer captured these dismal photos of life in North Korea on his phone

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A dog Kim Jong Un gave to South Korea as a peace gift has had 6 puppies

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North Korea South Korea Dogs puppies

  • A dog given to South Korea by North Korea earlier this year has given birth to three male and three female puppies.
  • South Korea described the dogs as a "symbol of peace" when they arrived in September.
  • South Korea’s presidential residence shared pictures of the puppies with the president and first lady.

A dog given to South Korea by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to promote peace has given birth to six puppies.

Two white Pungsan dogs were presented to South Korean President Moon Jae-in in September as a peace offering from North Korea to symbolize the two nations' warming relations.

One of the dogs, Gomi, recently gave birth to three female and three male puppies, Moon's office said on Twitter this week, adding that the president and the first lady were taking care of them.

South Korea puppies Moon Jae-in

The images were originally shared by South Korea's Blue House, the official presidential residence.

South Korean puppies

The Blue House also shared a video of Moon with one of the dogs and a puppy.

South Korea described Gomi and the other dog, Songgang, as a "symbol of peace" when they arrived in September.

To get there, they had to undergo a quarantine and pass through the heavily fortified demilitarized zone and the so-called truce village of Panmunjom.

North Korea gifts dog to South Korea

The breed is "designated as a North Korean 'natural monument' animal,"Reuters reported.

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North Korea just said there's no way it's going to denuclearize unless the US removes its own nuclear threat first

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North Korea nuclear weapon

  • North Korea said Thursday it will never give up its nuclear weapons unless the United States does so first.
  • The statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency casts further doubts on whether leader Kim Jong Un will ever let go of his nuclear arsenal.
  • Kim and US President Donald Trump met June 12 in Singapore where they issued a vague goal for the “complete denuclearization” of the Korean Peninsula.

 

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea said Thursday it will never unilaterally give up its nuclear weapons unless the United States removes its nuclear threat first, a statement that raises further doubts on whether leader Kim Jong Un will ever relinquish an arsenal he may see as his greatest guarantee of survival.

The statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency came amid a deadlock in nuclear negotiations between the United States and North Korea over the sequencing of the denuclearization process and removal of international sanctions.

But North Korea for decades has been pushing a concept of denuclearization that bears no resemblance to the American definition, vowing to pursue nuclear development until the United States removes its troops and the nuclear umbrella defending South Korea and Japan. In Thursday’s statement, the North reiterated its traditional stance on denuclearization and accused Washington of misleading what had been agreed on in Singapore.

“The United States must now recognize the accurate meaning of the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, and especially, must study geography the right way,” the statement said.

“When we talk about the Korean Peninsula, it includes the territory of our republic and also the entire region of (South Korea) where the United States has placed its invasive force, including nuclear weapons. When we talk about the complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, it means the removal of all sources of nuclear threat, not only from the South and North but also from areas neighboring the Korean Peninsula,” the statement said.

The U.S. removed its tactical nuclear weapons from South Korea in the 1990s.

The nuclear negotiations between Washington and Pyongyang stalled since the Trump-Kim meeting. The United States wants North Korea to provide a detailed account of nuclear and missile facilities that would be inspected and dismantled under a potential deal, while the North is insisting that sanctions be lifted first.

The North Korean statement came a day after Stephen Biegun, the Trump’s administration’s special envoy on North Korea, told reporters in South Korea that Washington was reviewing easing travel restrictions on North Korea to facilitate humanitarian shipments to help resolve the impasse in nuclear negotiations.

SEE ALSO: 21 photos of Noerth Korea that Kim would not want you to see.

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North Korea's Kim Jong Un visits China amid reports of another summit with Trump

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xi and kim jong un

  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is believed to be making a four-day trip to China.
  • Kim may be coordinating with his only major ally ahead of a summit with President Donald Trump that could happen as early as this year.
  • Kim's trip comes after US and North Korean officials reportedly met in Vietnam to discuss the location of a second summit between Kim and Trump as the two nations look to settle the North's decades-long pursuit of a nuclear arsenal.

SEOUL (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is making a four-day trip to China, the North's state media reported Tuesday, in what's likely an effort by Kim to coordinate with his only major ally ahead of a summit with US President Donald Trump that could happen early this year.

Kim departed for China on Monday afternoon with his wife Ri Sol Ju and other top officials, the North's Korean Central News Agency said. It said Kim is visiting China at the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping.

South Korean media reported that Kim's distinctive armored train was expected to reach Beijing on Tuesday morning, which happens to be Kim's birthday.

Kim's trip comes after US and North Korean officials reportedly met in Vietnam to discuss the location of a second summit between Kim and Trump as the two nations look to settle the North's decades-long pursuit of a nuclear arsenal.

Washington and Pyongyang seemed close to war at points during 2017 as the North staged a series of increasingly powerful weapons tests that got it tantalizingly close to its nuclear goal of one day targeting with pinpoint accuracy anywhere on the US mainland

Kim Jong Un

Possibly fearing the effect on his country's terrible economy of crushing outside sanctions imposed because of his weapons' tests, Kim abruptly turned to diplomacy with Seoul and Washington last year. Three times he visited China, which is North Korea's most important trading partner and a key buffer against pressure from Washington.

But even after what was seen as a blockbuster summit between Kim and Trump in Singapore last June — the first-ever between the leaders of the war enemies — there's been little real progress in nuclear disarmament.

Washington is pressing the North to offer up a detailed accounting of its nuclear arsenal, while Pyongyang says it has already done enough and it's time for the US to ease harsh international sanctions that hold back the North Korean economy.

Despite Trump's repeated assurances that another summit will allow he and Kim to make a grand deal to settle the nuclear standoff and change a relationship marked by decades of animosity and mistrust, outside analysts are highly skeptical that the North will easily abandon a nuclear arsenal constructed in the face of deep poverty and likely seen by Kim as his only guarantee of regime survival.

___

Associated Press writer Hyung-jin Kim contributed to this story from Seoul.

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WATCH: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's motorcade arrives in China for meeting with Xi Jinping

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  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un arrived in China with his wife, Ri Sol Ju, and other senior officials for a four-day trip.
  • North Korean propaganda outlets claimed Kim had been invited to the country by Chinese President Xi Jinping.
  • The trip comes amid rumors of a second summit with US President Donald Trump, which may be held as early as this year.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un arrived in China with his wife, Ri Sol Ju, and other senior officials for a four-day trip, according to Chinese and North Korean media reports on Tuesday.

Kim, who reportedly traveled to China on his armored train, arrived during what is believed to be his 36th birthday, according to the Associated Press. North Korean propaganda outlets claimed Kim had been invited to the country by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The trip comes amid rumors of a second summit with US President Donald Trump, which may be held as early as this year. Representatives from the two countries reportedly held discussions in Vietnam to discuss the venue for the second summit.

"It will be announced probably in the not-too-distant future," Trump said of the summit and North Korea to reporters on Sunday. "They do want to meet and we want to meet and we'll see what happens."

The proposed summit comes after Trump met Kim in Singapore in June, the first such meeting between a sitting US president and North Korean leader, where the two signed an agreement outlining broad goals for denuclearization.

Watch video footage of Kim Jong Un's motorcade here »

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Kim Jong Un rode his personal armored train to China to spend his 35th birthday with Xi Jinping

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  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un traveled to China on Tuesday for a four-day summit with President Xi Jinping.
  • Tuesday is also Kim's 35th birthday.
  • The North Korean leader took his family's personal armored train and traveled through Beijing with a massive motorcade.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un traveled on his personal armored train to China to spend his birthday with President Xi Jinping.

Kim arrived in Beijing on Tuesday, which is his 35th birthday.

North Korean state media aired footage of Kim walking along a long red carpet to board his family's train, which is bulletproof and has white conference rooms and pink leather chairs.

He waved to the dozens of government officials and army officers who had lined up to send him off.

He was accompanied by at least eight other officials as well as his wife, the former singer Ri Sol Ju.

Watch clips of his departure below, as published by BBC Monitoring:

Read more:Inside Kim Jong Un's personal train — which is bulletproof and has all-white conference rooms and its own red-carpet ramp

The CNN reporter Matt Rivers on Tuesday also published video of Kim's motorcade — at least four black cars and at least 16 motorbikes — traveling along Chang'An Avenue, a busy boulevard in central Beijing that appeared to have been cleared for Kim's visit.

Kim and Xi are due to meet on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, Rivers said.

Kim's trip to China — his fourth in less than a year — comes amid rumors of a second summit with US President Donald Trump.

China is North Korea's most important trading partner and a buffer against pressure from the US.

Trump said earlier this week that he was "negotiating a location" for a second meeting with Kim. White House officials have been considering Hawaii, Bangkok, and Hanoi, Vietnam, according to CNN.

Trump and Kim first met face-to-face in June in Singapore, where they agreed to work toward denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula. Their agreement did not mention a timeline, however, and provided only vague details.

There has since been little real progress in terms of nuclear disarmament, which is the stated aim of US engagement with North Korea.

The US wants North Korea to provide detailed accounts of its nuclear arsenal, while Pyongyang says it has done enough and now wants Washington to ease economic sanctions.

Read more:North Korea's Kim Jong Un visits China amid reports of another summit with Trump

Trump said earlier this week that his administration had "a very good dialogue" with its North Korean counterparts, but he said sanctions would remain until they see "very positive" results.

Join the conversation about this story »

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Inside Kim Jong Un's personal train — which is bulletproof, has all-white conference rooms, and its own red carpet ramp

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kim jong un train inside

  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un traveled to China on his family's personal armored train on Tuesday.
  • Not much is known about this train, but previous accounts and footage show it to be filled with French wine, Apple computers, and plush leather seats.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un spent his 35th birthday traveling to Beijing, where he will reportedly spend four days meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

State media showed Kim walking along a red carpet to board his family's personal armored train — a 21-carriage green train with a distinctive yellow line running across it.

Not much is known about the Kim family train, but previous accounts and footage show it to be filled with imported French wine, Apple computers, and plush leather seats.

Photos from North Korean state media provide a rare look inside the unusual vehicle — take a look inside:

SEE ALSO: Photos over 70 years show how North Korea's Kim family went from starving guerilla fighters to going toe-to-toe with Trump

North Korean TV on Tuesday aired footage of Kim's departure for Beijing. He is seen walking along a red carpet to board the train, and waving to dozens of government officials and army officers who lined up to send him off.

 



Kim also used this train on his first trip to China last March. That trip was largely kept secret, but North Korea watchers immediately recognized the green train with yellow horizontal lines, which both Kim and his father Kim Jong Il had used before.

 



When Kim Jong Il travelled on the train, power to other lines would be shut down so nobody could get in his way.

Source: The Chosun Ilbo



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How North Korean leader Kim Jong Un became one of the world's scariest dictators

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  • Kim Jong Un, the North Korean leader who is regarded as one of the world's most repressive and bombastic rulers, turned 35 on January 8.
  • After a year of ushering in historic international peace agreements and much discussion over North Korea's nuclear arsenal, Kim's rule continues to cause concern on the world stage.
  • Despite his high-profile career, there is still relatively little known of Kim.
  • Here is the story of how he became one of the world's scariest dictators.

Kim Jong Un, the North Korean leader who has presided over his country's shocking, uninvited entrance into the nuclear club, turned 35 on January 8.

Kim, current head of the Kim dynasty that's ruled North Korea since the 1950s, has overseen several nuclear tests, dozens of missile tests, and the most tense, heated exchanges with a US commander in chief in his country's history.

But between threats of nuclear annihilation, brinkmanship, and attacks on South Korea, Kim — who assumed power at such a young age that many thought his rule would be doomed — has kept a firm grip on power throughout.

With all this attention, still relatively little is known of Kim.

Here's what we do know of how he grew to be one of the world's scariest dictators.

Paul Szoldra and Veronika Bondarenko contributed to a previous version of this post.

SEE ALSO: Mystery children, sibling rivalries, and sudden disappearances: This is Kim Jong Un's family tree

SEE ALSO: The mysterious life of Kim Jong Un's wife, Ri Sol Ju — who probably has 3 children and frequently disappears from the public eye

Kim Jong Un was born on January 8 — 1982, 1983, or 1984.

His parents were future North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il and his consort, Ko Young Hee. He had an older brother named Kim Jong Chul and would later have a younger sister named Kim Yo Jong.

While Kim Jong Un's official birth year is 1982, various reports suggest that the year was changed for symbolic reasons, including that it was 70 years after the birth of Kim Il Sung and 40 years after the birth of Kim Jong Il.

But when the US Treasury Department sanctioned Kim Jong Un, the agency listed his official date of birth as January 8, 1984.



Kim, here with his mother, lived at home as a child.

During this period, North Korea was ruled by "Great Leader" Kim Il Sung. While Kim Jong Il was the heir apparent, Kim Jong Un's path to command was far less certain.



Then it was off to Switzerland to attend boarding school.

Called "Pak Un" and described as the son of an employee of the North Korean embassy, Kim Jong Un is thought to have attended an English-language international school in Gümligen, near Bern.

Kim Jong Un is described by former classmates as a quiet student who spent most of his time at home, but he had a sense of humor, too.

"He was funny," former classmate Marco Imhof told The Mirror."Always good for a laugh."

"He had a sense of humor; got on well with everyone, even those pupils who came from countries that were enemies of North Korea,"another former classmate told the German newspaper Welt am Sonntag. "Politics was a taboo subject at school ... we would argue about football, not politics."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un is 35 — here's how he became one of the world's scariest dictators

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This video was originally published on January 18, 2016.

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President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un to meet again "soon" in Singapore

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kim jong un donald trump

  • According to reports from both the Korea Herald and Reuters, Singapore might be hosting another Trump-Kim summit.
  • Vietnam has been shortlisted along with Singapore as another possible location for the leaders' next meeting.
  • Both countries are also within flying distance of Kim's plane.

 

Singapore might once again find itself host of a Trump-Kim summit, according to reports from both the Korea Herald and Reuters.

South Korea's Foreign Affairs Ministry officials revealed that the republic could be shortlisted as a potential location for the leaders' second meeting, according to the Korea Herald.

Alongside Singapore, Vietnam was also highlighted as a possible option for another summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump.

Trump and Kim

The summit is scheduled to take place soon, according to a Reuters report quoting South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

South Korea had initially hoped that Panmunjom — a truce village in the Demilitarized Zone between the two Koreas and site of Kim and Moon's historic summit in April — would host the Trump-Kim meeting, but the probability of this was "slim," the Korea Herald quoted a ministry official as saying.

Read more:Donald Trump has a look-alike — and she's a Spanish potato farmer

"(The venues you should pay attention to) are those mentioned by media, including Vietnam, Singapore and Hawaii," an official told the Korea Herald.

trump kim singapore

However, according to another official quoted in the report, Hawaii was an "unrealistic location" due to the lack of a North Korean embassy.

This leaves Singapore and Vietnam, both of which have North Korean embassies, as prime candidates to play host.

Read more:Here's why Donald Trump's tweets may be more sophisticated than you think

These countries are also within flying distance of Kim's plane, the Chammae-1 — a Soviet-era aircraft which can only fly a maximum distance of 7,000 kilometers.

SEE ALSO: Trump-Kim Summit: Trump is pushing for North Korea's denuclearisation, but Kim has his own agenda

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Trump’s new missile defense plan could prep the US for a decapitation strike on North Korea

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  • President Donald Trump rolled out his vision for the future of nuclear war fighting on Thursday with the Missile Defense Review, and the plan reads like a guide to taking down North Korean missile launches.
  • Some of the very same ideas that came up for negating a North Korean missile attack during the height of the nuclear crisis in 2017 came up in the review.
  • Trump has directed the US to research using the F-35 and possibly a laser drone to take out missile launches which only make sense over North Korea, which has relatively few nuclear missiles.
  • Even as Trump goes ahead trying to find an uneasy peace with Pyongyang, the missile defense review clearly looks to upset the deterrence relationship and balance between the two nuclear powers. 

President Donald Trump rolled out his vision for the future of nuclear war fighting on Thursday with the Missile Defense Review, and the plan reads like a guide to taking down North Korean missile launches.

The review, originally slotted to come out in May 2018, may have been postponed to avoid spooking North Korea, whose leader Kim Jong Un met with Trump the following month, Defense News reported

North Korea regularly reacts harshly to any US military move that could threaten it, and has frequently threatened to strike the US with nuclear weapons in the past. 

Read more:Trump just reimagined how the US will fight nuclear wars — but it's a losing battle with Russia

Throughout 2017, the US and North Korea traded nuclear threats that saw the world dragged to the brink of unimaginable bloodshed and destruction. 

During that time, military planners, Congress, and the president all considered the unimaginable: Going to war with North Korea. 

'All options' still on the table

Kim Jong Un Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Hwasong 14 North Korea

North Korea, a serial human rights violator and nuclear proliferator, presents itself as an easy target for US intervention even for the most dovish commander in chief, but there's one small problem. 

North Korea's chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, all of which can be affixed to ballistic missiles, pose a tremendous threat to South Korea, a staunch US ally, and increasingly, the US mainland itself. 

Read more:Here's why the US would have to be insane to attack North Korea

North Korea discussed lobbing missiles at the US military in Guam and detonating a nuclear warhead above the Pacific ocean. Former Pentagon and Obama administration officials say this easily could have led to an all-out war.

During that period, Congress discussed the F-35 stealth fighter jet as a possible ICBM killer

"Very simple — what we're trying to do is shoot [air-to-air missiles] off F-35s in the first 300 seconds it takes for the missile to go up in the air," Rep. Duncan Hunter said during a November 2017 meeting on Capitol Hill with the Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance, according to Inside Defense.

Read more:The Missile Defense Agency wants a laser-equipped drone that would be a silver bullet for stopping North Korea

Additionally, the US Missile Defense Agency in June 2017 put out a request for proposals to build a high-altitude long-endurance unmanned aircraft capable of flying higher than 63,000 feet and carrying a laser to shoot down ballistic missiles as they arc upwards towards the sky.

Both of these systems, a laser drone and an F-35 ICBM killer came up in Trump's new missile defense review. North Korea was mentioned 79 times in the review, the same number of times as Russia, though Moscow likely has 100 times as many nuclear warheads as Pyongyang. 

But Russia, the world's largest country by far, has a vast airspace no drone or F-35 could patrol. Only North Korea, a small country, makes any sense for these systems. 

Even defense is offensive

A U.S. Air Force B-2 Spirit bomber deployed from Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, and F-22 Raptors with the Hawaii Air National Guard’s 154th Wing fly near Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, during a interoperability training mission Jan. 15, 2019.

While the Missile Defense Review in theory discusses only defensive measures against missile attacks, the military does not only defend, it also goes on offense.

Trump has directed the US to research using the F-35 and possibly a laser drone to take out missile launches which only make sense over North Korea.

If the US could significantly limit missile retaliation from North Korea it would mitigate the downside of taking out Kim, one of the top threats to US national security. 

On Friday, a North Korean nuclear negotiator will head to Washington to talk denuclearization with the White House.

But even as Trump goes ahead trying to find an uneasy peace with Pyongyang, the missile defense review clearly looks to give the US capabilites certain to upset the deterrence relationship and balance between the two nuclear powers. 

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The White House has reportedly picked Vietnam for the next Trump-Kim summit

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  • US officials are reportedly planning on going to Vietnam for the next Trump-Kim summit.
  • The meeting comes less than a year after the first meeting between a US president and a North Korean leader.
  • Despite the historic nature of the meeting, little progress has been made on the goals staked out there.

Trump administration officials are reportedly planning on going to Vietnam for the next summit between the US president and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, people familiar with the plans told Bloomberg.

On Friday, after a meeting between Trump and Vice Chairman Kim Yong Chol, one of Kim's top aides and a former spy chief, the White House said the next meeting between the two leaders would take place in late February.

Prior to that meeting, sources told Reuters that Hanoi was keen to host the meeting and was preparing to receive the two leaders. The Southeast Asian country had been touted as a likely venue for the summit.

trump kim singapore

Hanoi, in northern Vietnam, and Danang, in central Vietnam, are widely viewed as possible locations for the meeting. An official in Danang told Reuters the city had not been asked to host it but had been told to prepare for a potential "A1" visit, referring to a high-profile foreign leader. Ho Chi Minh City in the south has also been mentioned.

A Vietnamese government official told AFP that "logistical preparations" for a Trump-Kim meeting had begun though "no official decision" had been made. Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said Thursday that while there was not yet a final decision, "we will do our best to facilitate the meeting" if Vietnam is picked.

Vietnam reportedly sees it as a chance to highlight its improved relations with the US. Their ties have warmed in recent years, as the US and countries in Asia seek to balance against China's rising influence. The US dropped an arms embargo on Vietnam in 2016, and in 2017 a US Navy aircraft carrier visited the country for the first time since the end of the Vietnam War.

USS Carl Vinson Vietnam Soldier

Trump and Kim met in Singapore in June — the first meeting between a US president and a North Korean leader, whose countries have never technically ended their 1950-1953 war — and concluded with vague statement in which Kim promised to work toward "the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula."

Trump has heralded that meeting, saying afterward that North Korea no longer presented a nuclear threat, and has touted his closeness with Kim, but since that summit the two sides have made little progress on that goal, in part because of a disagreement over what "denuclearization" means.

On Friday, after announcing the next meeting would take place late next month, the White House said sanctions on Pyongyang would remain in place.

SEE ALSO: Trump leaves 'military option' on the table for Venezuela, which he calls as threatening as North Korea

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NOW WATCH: North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un is 35 — here's how he became one of the world's scariest dictators

Trump is teasing bombshells for his State of the Union address. They could include a national emergency over the wall and a new summit with Kim Jong Un.

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  • President Donald Trump is teasing show-stopping announcements he may include in his State of the Union address on Tuesday.
  • Ideas he has publicly toyed with include the declaration of a national emergency to secure border-wall funding and the confirmation of a second meeting with North Korea's Kim Jong Un.
  • Trump's goal with an emergency declaration would be to spend money on a border wall without approval from Congress, though a new poll indicates it would be an unpopular move.
  • In an interview that aired Sunday, Trump also said that his next meeting with Kim "is set" and that he would most likely reveal details like the date and venue on Tuesday.

President Donald Trump has been teasing bombshells that he may drop during his State of the Union address on Tuesday night.

Trump has publicly mulled using the speech to declare a national emergency over illegal immigration and to confirm a new summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

Asked whether he would declare a national state of emergency, Trump told reporters on Friday to "listen closely" to the address.

Trump has mulled declaring an emergency as a way of getting money to build a wall along the southwestern US border without the approval of Congress.

The inability of Trump and lawmakers to agree on wall funding caused a record-breaking partial government shutdown, which stretched from late December to the end of January.

Read more: Here are the details you might miss watching Trump's State of the Union address on TV

On Friday, when asked whether people should expect him to declare a national emergency, Trump said: "I think there's a good chance that we'll have to do that. But we will at the same time be building, regardless, we're building a wall. And we're building a lot of wall. But I can do it a lot faster the other way."

He hinted that the State of the Union was where he would announce the move.

"Well, I'm saying listen closely to the State of the Union," he said. "I think you'll find it very exciting."

donald trump state of the union 2018

Trump told The New York Times last week that declaring a national emergency might be his chosen route to try to get the wall built.

"I’ll continue to build the wall and we'll get the wall finished," he said. "Now whether or not I declare a national emergency — that you'll see."

He continued to call the issue an "emergency" on Sunday, when speaking on the CBS show "Face the Nation."

"It's national emergency, it's other things and you know there have been plenty national emergencies called," he said.

Read more: Trump is planning to slam abortion in his State of the Union speech, fanning the flames of the culture wars

CNN last month reported that the White House was preparing a draft national emergency declaration and had identified where it could get the money for a wall.

Such a move would appear to be unpopular. In a CBS poll published Sunday, 66% of Americans said Trump should not declare a national emergency if Congress did not fund a wall.

Donald Trump state of the union 2018

Trump raised the issue of the border wall again on Sunday, writing on Twitter that "Republicans must be prepared to do whatever is necessary for STRONG Border Security."

"Dems do nothing," he wrote. "If there is no Wall, there is no Security. Human Trafficking, Drugs and Criminals of all dimensions - KEEP OUT!,"

A bipartisan group of lawmakers are working to reach a compromise on border security before government funding runs out February 15, when another government shutdown could begin.

In an interview that aired Sunday, Trump told CBS he would not take the prospect of another shutdown "off the table."

Another summit with Kim Jong Un

Trump also said in the Sunday interview that his next meeting with North Korea's leader "is set" and that he would reveal details about the planned meeting "probably State of the Union or shortly before."

Trump said the US and North Korea had "made tremendous progress" and contradicted the belief of Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats that Kim was unlikely to surrender his nuclear weapons. "That's what the intelligence chief thinks," he said.

kim jong un donald trump

Trump instead reiterated his belief that the countries could come to an agreement, saying "there's also a very good chance that we will make a deal."

"It has a chance to be one of the great economic countries in the world," he said. "He can't do that with nuclear weapons and he can't do that on the path they're on now.

"I like him. I get along with him great. We have a fantastic chemistry."

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Trump uses State of the Union to announce venue, dates for second meeting with North Korea's Kim Jong Un

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  • President Donald Trump during his State of the Union address announced the venue and dates for an impending meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. 
  • Trump will meet with Kim in Vietnam on February 27 and 28.
  • Trump and Kim had a historic meeting in June in which North Korea pledged to work toward denuclearization, but there are concerns about the lack of progress in this regard. 
  • Trump has faced criticism for being too amicable toward Kim, whom he was trading threats with not so long ago. 
  • Follow along with all of INSIDER's coverage of the State of the Union here.

President Donald Trump during his State of the Union address on Tuesday said he will meet with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un for a second time later this month in Vietnam.

The meeting is scheduled for February 27 and 28, Trump said as he touted his efforts to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula.

"As part of a bold new diplomacy, we continue our historic push for peace on the Korean Peninsula," Trump said. "Our hostages have come home, nuclear testing has stopped, and there has not been a missile launch in 15 months."

"If I had not been elected President of the United States, we would right now, in my opinion, be in a major war with North Korea with potentially millions of people killed," Trump added. "Much work remains to be done, but my relationship with Kim Jong Un is a good one. And Chairman Kim and I will meet again on February 27 and 28 in Vietnam."

trump kim singapore

During the president's June 2018 meeting with Kim in Singapore, the North Korean leader pledged to work toward denuclearization. But the US intelligence community has seen little progress towards that goal and in a recent report said Pyongyang is "unlikely" to give up its nuclear weapons program. 

"Pyongyang has not conducted any nuclear-capable missile or nuclear tests in more than a year, has declared its support for the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, and has reversibly dismantled portions of its WMD infrastructure," the report stated.

Read more: 'He's doing the enemy's job for them': Current and former officials compare Trump to a toddler and say his attacks on the intel community create a goldmine for foreign governments

But the report added that North Korea retains weapons of mass destruction (WMD) capabilities and said the intelligence community "continues to assess that it is unlikely to give up all of its WMD stockpiles, delivery systems, and production capabilities. North Korean leaders view nuclear arms as critical to regime survival."

"We continue to observe activity inconsistent with full denuclearization," the intelligence community's report said. 

Trump has sparred with his intel chiefs in recent weeks over their diverging views with him on an array of issues, including North Korea. 

Meanwhile, North Korea is currently engaged in efforts to ensure its nuclear and ballistic capabilities are not vulnerable to missile strikes, UN monitors said this week.

Despite doubts of North Korea's willingness to fully denuclearize, Trump seems hopeful he can get the job done.

Stephen Biegun, the US envoy to North Korea, traveled to Pyongyang on Wednesday to meet with officials in preparation for the impending summit. 

In Trump's first year in the White House, he routinely traded threats and insults with Kim from across the globe. His tone toward the North Korea leader changed in 2018 and has continued to soften since they met last June. 

Trump has gone as far to say he and Kim are "in love."

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