'We fell in love:' Trump swoons over
letters from North Korea's Kim
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[October 01, 2018]
By Roberta Rampton
WHEELING, WVa. (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump took his enthusiasm for his detente with North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un to new heights on Saturday, declaring at a rally with
supporters that "we fell in love" after exchanging letters.
Trump and Kim have said they want to work toward denuclearizing the
Korean peninsula, holding an unprecedented meeting earlier this year in
Singapore to discuss the idea.
Before they turned the page on decades of public acrimony, the leaders
regularly traded threats and insults as North Korea pushed to develop a
nuclear missile capable of hitting the United States.
"I was really being tough - and so was he. And we would go back and
forth," Trump told a rally in West Virginia.
"And then we fell in love, okay? No, really - he wrote me beautiful
letters, and they're great letters," he said.
His supporters laughed and applauded. Trump grumbled that commentators
would cast him as "unpresidential" for describing Kim in such glowing
terms.
The Trump administration is preparing for a second summit with Kim to
talk about denuclearization. The time and location have not yet been
announced.
Despite the warmer tone to the relationship, North Korea has not
complied with U.S. demands to provide a complete inventory of its
weapons programs and take irreversible steps to give up its arsenal.
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President Donald Trump makes remarks at WesBanco Arena during a Make
America Great Again rally in Wheeling, West Virginia, September 29,
2018. REUTERS/Mike Theiler
Three senior U.S. officials involved in North Korea policy said this
week that no progress has been made in moving toward serious
negotiations on eliminating or even halting Kim’s nuclear weapons
and ballistic missile programs.
So far, all three said, speaking on the condition of anonymity, the
North has not even agreed to define basic terms such as
“denuclearization”, “verifiable”, and “irreversible”. Most of the
steps it has said it has taken could easily be replaced or reversed.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; additional reporting by John Walcott;
Editing by Michael Perry)
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