Trump administration vague on future of N. Korea summit
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
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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
Trump and South Korea's Moon Jae-in met ahead of the planned U.S.-North Korea summit in Singapore
Navy says it has upgraded warship's "air defense, ballistic missile defense, surface warfare and undersea warfare capabilities"
President Trump will meet with South Korean President Moon Jae-in today at the White House. Moon is expected to do damage control after North Korea's recent change in tone raised the possibility that Kim Jong Un will not meet with Mr. Trump next month. Weijia Jiang reports.
President Moon Jae-in visits Washington as worries about planned summit with North's Kim Jong Un begin to mount
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
When asked if the summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is still on, President Trump responded "We’ll see what happens"
Senior regime official says country has no interest in "one-sided" summit, takes issue with recent remarks by Trump adviser John Bolton
N. Korea threatens to cancel U.S. summit; Line of police honor fallen officer's son
North Korea is threatening to cancel the highly awaited summit between the country's leader, Kim Jong Un, and President Trump. CBS News' Weijia Jiang spoke to CBSN from the White House about why this move is coming now -- just one month before the summit is scheduled -- and what they're looking to gain from it.
The summit between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is supposed to happen in four weeks in Singapore. But now, the North is threatening to call it off, amid military exercises conducted between the U.S. and South Korea. CBS News' Weijia Jiang reports.
Isaac Stone Fish, CBSN contributor and senior fellow at the Asia Society, joins CBSN with a look at Tuesday's report that North Korea canceled a high-level meeting with South Korea and threatened to scrap a historic summit between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un over U.S.-South Korean military exercises.
North Korea canceled a high-level meeting Wednesday with South Korea and also threatened to call off a historic summit planned for next month with President Trump due to ongoing military exercises involving the U.S. and South Korea. But State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert says the U.S. "will continue to plan the meeting between President Trump and Kim Jong Un."
"What Chairman Kim will get from America is our finest. Our entrepreneurs. Our risk takers. Our capital providers. Not our taxpayers," Pompeo told "Face the Nation"
It would be a dramatic but symbolic event to set up leader Kim Jong Un's summit with President Donald Trump next month
National security adviser John Bolton called a New York Times report "utter nonsense"
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has vowed to shut down the country's nuclear test site in May, according to Seoul's presidential office
President Trump praised the meeting between North and South Korea Friday, saying he was looking forward to a meeting with Kim Jong Un in the coming months. CBS News foreign correspondent Ben Tracy joins CBSN to discuss the outcome of the meeting, and the impact it will have on Mr. Trump's upcoming summit with Kim Jong Un.
Lot of heads still spinning as North Korea's Kim Jong Un continues seeming transformation from dictator to diplomat
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in hold a ceremonial tree planting on the Military Demarcation Line during a historic summit at the Inter-Korean Summit.
The national security adviser says the U.S. wants to see something "concrete and tangible" from North Korea's leadership, and he suggested the administration is considering the "Libya model" for denuclearizing the Korean peninsula
Bolton joined us to discuss North Korea, the upcoming summit and the future of the Iran nuclear deal
Kim also expressed optimism about his anticipated meeting with President Trump
The annual White House Correspondents Dinner is being held in Washington D.C. Saturday night, with presidential punchlines on the menu. In Washington, Michigan, President Trump will likely roast the media at a campaign-style rally. Errol Barnett reports.
President Trump held a campaign-style rally in Washington, Michigan, on Saturday where said his meeting with North Korea could happen in 3-4 weeks. "Let's see how it goes, I think we're gonna do just fine," Mr. Trump said.
The Brown University shooting suspect was found dead in a storage unit in New Hampshire. Authorities believe he is also responsible for killing an MIT professor.
The Justice Department expects to release "several hundred thousand" records from the Epstein files today, a top official said. Follow live updates here.
Cathy Grossu, the mother-in-law of retired NASCAR driver Greg Biffle, said she had seen the family a day before the fatal crash.
Investigators are piecing together a detailed timeline of Claudio Neves Valente's actions before, during and after the Brown and MIT shootings.
Officials say the same gunman who opened fire at Brown University also killed an MIT professor two days later. Here's what we know about the suspect, who was found dead Thursday night.
Police said the suspect was declared dead at a hospital after jumping from the building's sixth floor, the Central News Agency reported.
This year has already seen eight of the busiest air travel days in TSA history. Could a December date join them?
Putin claims no "willingness from Ukraine" to negotiate a peace deal as he touts battlefield gains, and Kyiv claims a brazen strike on a ship far from Russia.
Albert Brooks said he's still in shock over the death of his friend Rob Reiner, whom he met at 14 years old.
A bankruptcy judge blocked an attempt by a nursing home chain's primary investor to shield himself from settlement payments and liability in lawsuits over allegations of poor care.
This year has already seen eight of the busiest air travel days in TSA history. Could a December date join them?
Cathy Grossu, the mother-in-law of retired NASCAR driver Greg Biffle, said she had seen the family a day before the fatal crash.
Investigators are piecing together a detailed timeline of Claudio Neves Valente's actions before, during and after the Brown and MIT shootings.
Sports betting companies face mounting competition from rapidly growing prediction markets such as Kalshi and Polymarket.
A bankruptcy judge blocked an attempt by a nursing home chain's primary investor to shield himself from settlement payments and liability in lawsuits over allegations of poor care.
Sports betting companies face mounting competition from rapidly growing prediction markets such as Kalshi and Polymarket.
Members of the carrier's AAdvantage loyalty program no longer earn miles or status points when purchasing a basic ticket.
Regulators said the parking module in certain Ford vehicles may fail, potentially allowing cars to roll away.
TikTok's China-based parent company ByteDance must sever ties with TikTok or lose access to U.S. app stores and web-hosting services
Federal prosecutors have unveiled charges against six more people accused of defrauding programs in Minnesota — adding to a scandal that has ensnared over 90 people..
Jack Smith, who oversaw two investigations into President Trump, appeared before the House Judiciary Committee for a closed-door deposition Wednesday.
The Justice Department expects to release "several hundred thousand" records from the Epstein files today, a top official said. Follow live updates here.
The Senate confirmed Admiral Kevin Lunday as Coast Guard commandant after agency guidance on the display of hate symbols such as swastikas and nooses was clarified.
A memo from Dr. Vinay Prasad, the head of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, may signal an effort to to rewrite the rules governing the U.S. vaccine system.
A memo from Dr. Vinay Prasad, the head of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, may signal an effort to to rewrite the rules governing the U.S. vaccine system.
The proposals run counter to the recommendations of most major U.S. medical organizations.
Nationally, the measles case count is nearing 2,000 for a disease that has been considered eliminated in the U.S. since 2000, a result of routine childhood vaccinations.
Kevin Murray was his family's health watchdog. His vigilance helped his brothers "avoid a real catastrophe."
"I don't know how I'm going to pay for this," said one person with an Affordable Care Act plan that will cost her $1,100 a month starting in January.
Police said the suspect was declared dead at a hospital after jumping from the building's sixth floor, the Central News Agency reported.
Putin claims no "willingness from Ukraine" to negotiate a peace deal as he touts battlefield gains, and Kyiv claims a brazen strike on a ship far from Russia.
Australia will use a sweeping buyback scheme to "get guns off our streets," Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Friday.
TikTok's China-based parent company ByteDance must sever ties with TikTok or lose access to U.S. app stores and web-hosting services
A U.S. official says a Kremlin envoy will travel to Florida to discuss a U.S.-proposed plan to end the war in Ukraine.
Kiefer Sutherland recalls Rob Reiner's reaction to filming Jack Nicholson's famous scene in "A Few Good Men."
Albert Brooks said he's still in shock over the death of his friend Rob Reiner, whom he met at 14 years old.
Kathy Bates rose to prominence with her Oscar-winning breakout role in Rob Reiner's adaptation of Stephen King's "Misery" in 1990.
Jelly Roll had said a pardon would make it easier for him to travel internationally for concert tours and to perform Christian missionary work without requiring burdensome paperwork.
Gloria Gaynor told "CBS Mornings" her hit 1978 song gave her hope during one of the most difficult periods of her life.
Sports betting companies face mounting competition from rapidly growing prediction markets such as Kalshi and Polymarket.
People are starting to develop lasting connections with artificial technology. Melissa J. Perry, the dean of the College of Public Health at George Mason University, joins CBS News with more details.
From labor shortages to environmental impacts, farmers are looking to AI to help revolutionize the agriculture industry. One California startup, Farm-ng, is tapping into the power of AI and robotics to perform a wide range of tasks, including seeding, weeding and harvesting.
TikTok has signed a deal to sell its U.S. operations to a group of investors in America, a source familiar with the deal tells CBS News. Jo Ling Kent has more.
Instacart's "unlawful tactics" hurt shoppers and raised the cost of groceries, according to the FTC.
The Trump administration intends to dismantle one of the world's leading climate research institutions, in Boulder, Colorado, over what it said were concerns about "climate alarmism."
The footage of a bear caring for an adopted cub was captured during the annual polar bear migration along the Western Hudson Bay in Churchill, Manitoba.
Most of the footprints are elongated and made by bipeds. The best-preserved ones bear traces of at least four toes.
NASA continues to aim its space telescopes at the visiting ice ball, estimated to be up to 3.5 miles in size.
Paleontologists have discovered and documented 16,600 footprints left by theropods, the dinosaur group that includes the Tyrannosaurus rex.
Lawmakers are reacting to comments from Todd Blanche, a top Justice Department official, regarding the partial release of Epstein files despite a law mandating the full release by today. CBS News' Scott MacFarlane explains.
More details are emerging about the suspect in the Brown University shooting, who is also being linked to the murder of an MIT professor. Anna Schecter reports, and Nancy Cordes has more on a visa program for foreigners that is being impacted as a result of the attacks.
Police said the suspect was declared dead at a hospital after jumping from the building's sixth floor, the Central News Agency reported.
Investigators are piecing together a detailed timeline of Claudio Neves Valente's actions before, during and after the Brown and MIT shootings.
A man approached a Providence, Rhode Island, officer with details on the Brown University shooting suspect and helped break the case open for officials, Rhode Island Attorney General Peter F. Neronha tells CBS News.
President Trump withdrew Isaacman's nomination for NASA administrator in April, before nominating him again in November.
NASA continues to aim its space telescopes at the visiting ice ball, estimated to be up to 3.5 miles in size.
Super-Earth TOI-561b is about 40 times closer to its host star than Mercury is to the sun.
NASA has lost contact with a spacecraft that's been orbiting Mars for more than a decade.
The European Space Agency said that the black hole inside the spiral galaxy NGC 3783 has the mass of 30 million suns.
A look back at the esteemed personalities who've left us this year, who'd touched us with their innovation, creativity and humanity.
Christy Salters-Martin dominated in the boxing ring but faced her toughest challenger at home.
Family seeks answers in death of newlywed who disappeared in 2005 while on Mediterranean honeymoon cruise.
Meet the tattooed beauty charged in the death of Google executive Forrest Hayes.
Calling himself the "Son of Sam" in a letter left at one of the crime scenes, David Berkowitz claimed voices were ordering him to kill -- starting in the summer of 1976, he went on a 13-month spree of impulse killings in New York City that left six dead and seven injured
Visit a Uyghur restaurant in Southern California, where culture is shared and the food is made with love. Plus, a man who wanted to save his friends life by donating a kidney ends up saving his own life.
Lawmakers are reacting to comments from Todd Blanche, a top Justice Department official, regarding the partial release of Epstein files despite a law mandating the full release by today. CBS News' Scott MacFarlane explains.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio took questions from members of the press as the U.S. and European nations navigate turbulent waters with Russia. Rubio also weighed in on operations near Venezuela. CBS News' Olivia Gazis reports.
President Trump is expected to make an announcement on his efforts to lower drug costs in the U.S. CBS News' Jennifer Jacobs reports.
More details are emerging about the suspect in the Brown University shooting, who is also being linked to the murder of an MIT professor. Anna Schecter reports, and Nancy Cordes has more on a visa program for foreigners that is being impacted as a result of the attacks.