North
Korea no longer poses a nuclear threat, nor is it the “biggest and most dangerous
problem” for the U.S., President Donald Trump said on Wednesday.
Trump
said this on his return from a summit in Singapore with North Korean leader,
Kim Jong-Un.
The
summit was the first between a sitting U.S. president and a North Korean leader
and followed a flurry of North Korean nuclear and missile tests and angry
exchanges between Trump and Jong-Un in 2017 that fueled fears of war.
“Everybody
can now feel much safer than the day I took office,” Trump said on Twitter.
“There
is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea. Meeting with Jong-Un was an
interesting and very positive experience. North Korea has great potential for
the future!”
On
Tuesday, Trump told a news conference after the summit that he would like to
lift sanctions against the North but that this would not happen immediately.
North
Korean state media lauded the summit as a resounding success, saying Trump
expressed his intention to halt U.S.-South Korea military exercises, offer
security guarantees to the North and lift sanctions against it as relations
improve.
Jong-Un
and Trump invited each other to their respective countries and both leaders
“gladly accepted,” the North’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.
“Jong-Un
and Trump had the shared recognition to the effect that it is important to
abide by the principle of step-by-step and simultaneous action in achieving
peace, stability and denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula,” KCNA said.
Trump
said the U.S. would stop military exercises with South Korea while North Korea
negotiated on denuclearisation.
“We
save a fortune by not doing war games, as long as we are negotiating in good
faith – which both sides are!” he said on Twitter.
U.S.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said Trump’s reasoning for halting the
exercises was “ridiculous”.
“It’s
not a burden onto the American taxpayer to have a forward deployed force in
South Korea,” Graham told CNN.
“It
brings stability. It’s a warning to China that you can’t just take over the
whole region.
“So,
I reject that analysis that it costs too much, but I do accept the proposition,
let’s stand down (on military exercises) and see if we can find a better way
here.”
Speaking
in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, Geng Shuang said he hoped all
parties could “grasp the moment of positive changes” on the peninsula to take constructive
steps toward a political resolution and promoting denuclearisation.
“At
this time, everyone had seen that North Korea has halted missile and nuclear
tests, and the U.S. and South Korea have to an extent restricted their military
actions.
“This
has de facto realized China’s dual suspension proposal,’’ he told a daily news
conference.
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