The Herald

President Trump: There is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea

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US President Donald Trump has declared on Twitter that there is “no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea” following his groundbrea­king summit with Kim Jong-un.

Mr Trump’s claim comes despite few guarantees emerging from the Singapore meeting with the North Korean leader on how and when Pyongyang would disarm.

The American President tweeted: “Just landed – a long trip, but everybody can now feel much safer than the day I took office.

“There is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea. Meeting with Kim Jong-un was an interestin­g and very positive experience.

North Korea has great potential for the future!”

Mr Trump and Mr Kim were returning to their respective stronghold­s following the talks

– but to far different receptions.

In Pyongyang, the North Korean autocrat woke up to state media’s enthusiast­ic claims of a victorious meeting with the US President.

Mr Trump, meanwhile, faced questions about whether he gave away too much in return for far too little when he bestowed a new legitimacy on Mr Kim’s rule and agreed, at Pyongyang’s request, to end military exercises with Seoul that the allies had long portrayed as crucial to Asian safety.

Much of Asia was still trying to process the whirlwind events.

There was, at times, a surreal quality to the carefully-staged, fivehour meeting between two men who had been threatenin­g each other with nuclear war and insulting each other’s mental and physical attributes just months before.

Mr Trump repeatedly praised Mr Kim’s negotiatin­g skills and their new relationsh­ip, and expressed hope for “a bright new future” for Mr Kim’s impoverish­ed nation.

But there are worries, especially in Tokyo and Seoul, which both have huge US military presences, about Mr Trump agreeing to halt US military exercises with South Korea, which the North has long claimed were invasion preparatio­ns.

That concession to Mr Kim appeared to catch the Pentagon and officials in Seoul off guard, and some South Koreans were alarmed.

US secretary of state Mike Pompeo met General Vincent Brooks, commander of US Forces Korea, after arriving in Seoul.

Mr Pompeo will meet South Korean president Moon Jae-in today to discuss the summit.

Japanese foreign minister Taro Kono is also heading to Seoul and is due to meet with Mr Pompeo and his South Korean counterpar­t. Mr Pompeo, the former CIA director, then plans to fly to Beijing to update the Chinese government on the talks.

On the issue the world has been most fixated on – North Korea’s pursuit of a nuclear arsenal meant to target the entire US mainland – Mr Trump and Mr Kim signed a joint statement that contained a repeat of past vows to work toward a denucleari­sed Korean Peninsula.

The details of how and when the North would denucleari­se appear yet to be determined, as are the nature of the unspecifie­d “protection­s” Mr Trump is pledging to Mr Kim.

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