Penticton Herald

Kim Jong Un got on his knees and begged Trump to reschedule meeting

- By JOSEF FEDERMAN

JERUSALEM — Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani on Wednesday boasted that Donald Trump’s tough line had forced the North Korean leader to beg to re-schedule a high-profile summit after the president abruptly called off the meeting.

After the cancellati­on, “Kim Jong Un got back on his hands and knees and begged for it, which is exactly the position you want to put him in,” Giuliani told a business conference in the Israeli city of Tel Aviv.

In an interview later with The Associated Press, Giuliani rejected suggestion­s that such comments might sour the atmosphere ahead of next week's summit, saying that the North Korean leader must understand that the United States is in a position of strength.

“It is pointing out that the president is the stronger figure,” Giuliani told the AP. “And you’re not going to have useful negotiatio­ns unless he accepts that.”

Giuliani said Trump had no choice but to call off the meeting after the North Koreans insulted Vice-President Mike Pence, National Security Adviser John Bolton and threatened “nuclear annihilati­on” of the U.S.

“President Trump didn’t take that. What he did was he called off the summit,” he said.

Giuliani said Kim quickly changed his position, expressed willingnes­s to discuss denucleari­zation and asked to have the meeting again.

“That's what I mean by begging for it,” Giuliani said.

The summit is back on in Singapore next Tuesday.

Giuliani, Trump’s lawyer in the Russian investigat­ion, noted that he was sharing a personal opinion and was not part of the U.S. foreign policy team.

The former New York mayor, a strong supporter of Israel, is in Israel for a number of appearance­s, including a speech to a Tel Aviv business conference earlier in the day and an address late Wednesday to OneFamily, a group that supports Israeli families whose loved ones have been wounded or killed in Palestinia­n attacks.

Speaking earlier at the Globes capital market conference, Giuliani suggested high-pressure tactics should be used with the Palestinia­n Authority, which has cut off ties with the U.S. to protest Trump's decision to recognize contested Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

“They have to be seeking peace. You’ve got to change the dynamic and put the pressure on them,” Giuliani said.

Giuliani is leading the defence of Trump in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into whether Trump associates co-ordinated with Russia during the 2016 presidenti­al election, and whether Trump took steps to shut down that investigat­ion through actions, including the firing of FBI Director James Comey.

Trump's team and allies have waged a public relations campaign against Mueller and the Justice Department to discredit the investigat­ion and soften the impact of the special counsel's potential findings. In the latest salvo, Giuliani accused Mueller of trying to “frame” the president.

Giuliani claimed that Mueller has produced no evidence of wrongdoing by the president, and has stacked his team with partisan Democrats, including supporters of Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign.

“They don't have a crime. And that’s why I say they’re trying to frame him. Because if they had any sense, they would realize they’re trying to put together a case on an innocent man. And that’s what we call in America framing somebody ,” Giulia ni said.

Though Trump insists he did nothing wrong, the statements from him and his lawyers have made clear that much of their defence revolves around establishi­ng that he was constituti­onally empowered to take the actions he took.

Giuliani rejected criticism that the defence team is attacking the justice system or public institutio­ns.

“We're trying to purify institutio­ns,” he added, accusing the media of trying to convict Trump and saying the prosecutor­s are “not saints” immune from attack.

Nonetheles­s, Giuliani said he remains in touch with Mueller, and that there have been discussion­s about allowing investigat­ors to question the president. But he said his client needs assurances he won't be railroaded.

“The president would very much like to do an interview. His lawyers are very, very suspicious,” he said.

“They're going to have to convince us that it’s going to be a fair interview.”

He said so far, Mueller has not produced evidence indicating wrongdoing by the president.

“If they can show us some hard, incriminat­ing facts from that evidence, then we would consider advising our client to be interviewe­d,” he said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Rudy Giuliani
The Associated Press Rudy Giuliani
 ?? The Associated Press ?? Kim Jong Un
The Associated Press Kim Jong Un

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