Without insults, 'we wouldn't have been here', Trump says
On Tuesday morning local time, history was made as US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shook hands in Singapore.
Sections
Extras
Watch Now
On Tuesday morning local time, history was made as US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shook hands in Singapore.
New Jersey's Sen. Robert Menendez criticized the joint statement President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un issued after their summit Monday, calling it "anemic" with "very little substance on anything."
After a historic summit in Singapore, Republicans back home are warning President Donald Trump on Tuesday not to let the lure of a deal with North Korea cloud the realities of dealing with a dictator.
Here's one sign of President Trump's confidence about this summit with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un: Trump gave a lengthy press conference and three TV interviews right afterward.
Perhaps it was Kim Jong Un, as interpreted through his translator, who best summed up the historic summit between President Donald Trump and the North Korean leader in Singapore.
The US military will stop "war games" on the Korean Peninsula, US President Donald Trump said Tuesday, as he announced details of his discussions with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
The handshake, the menu, the positioning of flags -- every aspect of the meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has been dissected and analyzed in the world's media. But in North Korea, Tuesday's historic summit didn't even merit a mention.
Nearly five hours of unprecedented and surreal talks between US President Donald Trump and North Korea's Kim Jong Un culminated on Tuesday with fulsome declarations of a new friendship but just vague pledges of nuclear disarmament.
As Tuesday's landmark summit between the leaders of the United States and North Korea drew to a close, questions remained for US allies in East Asia as to what Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un's budding relationship will mean for the region.
President Donald Trump said the roughly 100,000 political prisoners in North Korea are going to be "the great winners" of his historic summit with dictator Kim Jong Un.