Pompeo on possible N. Korea summit
After President Trump raised doubts about whether the summit with North Korea will happen on June 12, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says that date is still the goal the State Department is working toward.
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After President Trump raised doubts about whether the summit with North Korea will happen on June 12, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says that date is still the goal the State Department is working toward.
President Trump, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo all gave vague answers about whether the summit with North Korea will take place
The White House insists it had nothing to do with the design
President Trump told reporters in a meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in that while North Korea's Kim Jong Un is "serious" about denuclearization, the June 12th date for a summit is potentially up for debate. CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett has more on the highly-anticipated talks.
White House press secretary Sarah Sanders talked about a commemorative coin produced by the White House Communications Agency (WHCA) in advance of the planned June summit between President Trump and Kim Jong Un. She said it's "not something the White House has anything to do with," and the White House has no input "on the design, the manufacture, the process in any capacity." It is, she said, "standard procedure" on the part of the WHCA. Sanders also fielded a question from CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett on how Mr. Trump is preparing for the summit.
Trump and South Korea's Moon Jae-in met ahead of the planned U.S.-North Korea summit in Singapore
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CBS News is the only U.S. broadcast network in the country to witness the purported dismantling
President Moon Jae-in visits Washington as worries about planned summit with North's Kim Jong Un begin to mount
President Trump said Thursday the June 12th Singapore summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is set to proceed as planned, despite threats by the regime in Pyongyang for it to be canceled. The president also appeared to contradict his national security adviser John Bolton over the possible use of the so-called "Libya Model" of denuclearization talks. "Face The Nation" moderator and CBS News senior foreign affairs correspondent Margaret Brennan joins CBSN to break down the latest developments.
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This week on "The Takeout," Gen. Michael Hayden explains what Kim Jong Un is hoping to get out of his planned summit with President Trump in June, and what could happen if negotiations fail
President Trump on Thursday seemed to give North Korea's Kim Jong Un a choice: give up your nuclear weapons and receive U.S. protection, or possibly end up like Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, who was overthrown and killed. Mr. Trump said the June 12 meeting in Singapore is still on. Margaret Brennan reports.
President Trump seemed to contradict earlier comments made by his national security adviser, John Bolton, after Bolton claimed the U.S. is considering the "Libyan model" as an approach to North Korea. Mr. Trump said the "Libyan model isn't a model that we have at all" for North Korea, adding that the U.S. "decimated" Libya.
President Donald Trump said "we'll see what happens" with North Korea after the regime threatened to call off next month's summit in Singapore. The White House is downplaying the threat. Markos Kounalakis, foreign affairs columnist for McClatchy News, joins CBSN's Reena Ninan with the latest.
President Trump contradicted earlier comments made by his national security adviser about North Korea
Asahi Shimbun reported that should North Korea agree, it would be removed from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism
The Trump team is gaming out policy plans, negotiating tactics, even menu items ahead of the planned meeting in Singapore
Ahead of President Trump's summit with Kim Jong Un, North Korea's threat that it won't denuclearize could put the administration in a bind. CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett reports on how officials are reacting to North Korea's new statements.
North Korea now says it may have to call off Kim Jong Un's meeting with President Trump over U.S. demands to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula. CBS News foreign correspondent Ben Tracy reports.
After North Korea canceled a meeting with South Korea and threatened to pull out of a summit with President Trump next month, reporters asked Mr. Trump Wednesday if North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is bluffing. "We'll have to see, we'll have to see," Mr. Trump said during a meeting with Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev.
The White House is continuing to prepare for next month's summit with North Korea despite threats from the regime it could pull out over demands to denuclearize. CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett and CBS News State Department reporter Kylie Atwood join CBSN with more on the Trump administration's response to Pyongyang's threat.
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