Trump says he has ‘clear objective’ for North Korea summit

US President Donald Trump says he believes North Korean leader Kim Jong-un can transform his country and do something great for his people. But he warned that the forthcoming summit is — what he called — a ‘one-time shot’.

US President Donald Trump boards Air Force One to depart for travel to Singapore from the Canadian Forces Base Bagotville in La Baie, Quebec, Canada, June 9, 2018.
Reuters

US President Donald Trump boards Air Force One to depart for travel to Singapore from the Canadian Forces Base Bagotville in La Baie, Quebec, Canada, June 9, 2018.

US President Donald Trump predicted on Saturday that he would know within a minute of meeting Kim Jong-un whether his “one-time shot” at peace with the North Korean leader had a chance of succeeding. 

Speaking just before embarking on his marathon journey to Singapore for the pair’s historic summit, Trump bristled with confidence as he boasted that contacts between their respective negotiating teams had been positive. 

“It’s unknown territory in the truest sense but I really feel confident,” Trump said as he prepared to leave the ongoing G7 summit in Canada early and head to Asia. 

“I feel that Kim Jong Un wants to do something great for his people and he has that opportunity... It’s a one-time shot,” he said at a press conference, adding that the North Koreans had been working “very well with us.”

TRT World's correspondent Jon Brain is in Singapore with more.

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After his remarks, Trump headed to the Canadian air base at Bagotville by helicopter before boarding Air Force One and setting off for Singapore, where he was scheduled to arrive late on Sunday.  

Trump and Kim are due to have the first ever US-North Korea summit in Singapore on Tuesday, with the American leader hoping his counterpart will scrap his nuclear weapons program in return for security guarantees.

The US president is the first of the G7 leaders to leave the summit in Canada where he has briefed his peers on the meeting.

“I am on a mission of peace and we’re going to be carrying the hearts of millions of people from all,” he said. “We have to get denuclearisation, we have to get something going.” 

Asked how long it would take for him to work out if Kim was serious about striking some kind of peace deal, Trump replied: “I think within the first minute I’ll know. 

“It’s just my touch, my feel. That’s what I do. 

“I think I’ll know pretty quickly whether or not, in my opinion, something positive will happen. And if I think it won’t happen, I’m not going to waste my time. I don’t want to waste his time.”

TRT World's Tetiana Anderson has more details from Quebec City, Canada.

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‘Positive spirit’

The summit between Kim and Trump will cap a remarkable turnaround in relations between two men who were trading furious insults less than six months ago. 

After North Korea carried out a series of long-range missile tests that potentially put the US mainland in range of a nuclear strike, Trump promised to respond with “fire and fury”. 

He also ridiculed Kim in a speech at the UN General Assembly as “Little Rocket Man” who in turn called Trump a “dotard”. 

But after a cooling of the rhetoric, both sides began forging tentative contacts that eventually saw Mike Pompeo — the former head of the CIA who is now secretary of state — meet Kim in Pyongyang. 

Speaking on Thursday, Pompeo said that Kim had personally assured him that North Korea was ready to give up its nuclear arsenal. 

Some critics have said that the summit is being rushed through, with Trump keen to chalk up his first major foreign policy achievement. 

But the president insisted that the US team was leaving no stone unturned in its preparations, while warning that patience was needed. 

“We’re going in with a very positive spirit, I think very well prepared. And, by the way, we have worked very well with their people,” he said. 

“Our people have been working very, very well with the representatives of North Korea. We’re going in with a very positive attitude and I think we’re going to come out fine,” he added. 

“But I’ve said it many times, who knows? Who knows? may not. May not work out. There’s a good chance it won’t work out. There’s probably an even better chance that it will take a period of time. It will be a process.”

Trade top agenda at G7 summit

Trump has told Group of G7 leaders that the United States wanted a quick end to trade practices that he says have led to an exodus of American companies and jobs to other countries. 

Trump, who angered his G7 partners last week with tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from Canada, the European Union and Mexico as part of his “America First” agenda, vowed to hold firm until US goods had “fair” access to markets. 

“The United States has been taken advantage of for decades and decades,” Trump said at a press conference on the second day of a two-day summit in Canada.

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He said he had suggested to the other G7 leaders that all trade barriers, including tariffs and subsidies, be eliminated. 

“You go tariff-free, you go barrier-free, you go subsidy free,” he said. “I did suggest it and people I guess were going to go back to the drawing board.” 

Trump denied that the summit had been contentious, a remark that contradicted what one G7 official described as a bitter harangue on Friday between the US president and his counterparts over tariffs. 

In an “extraordinary” exchange, Trump repeated a list of grievances about US trade, mainly with the EU and Canada, a French presidency official told reporters. 

“And so began a long litany of recriminations, somewhat bitter reports that the United States was treated unfairly, that the trading system was totally unfavourable to the United States, the American economy, American workers, the middle class,” the official said. 

“In short, a long, frank rant which is undoubtedly very unusual in this kind of formats,” the official added. 

French President Emmanuel Macron responded in a “courteous but very firm tone” to present the European side of the story, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe chimed in as well, the official said. 

Despite the apparent acrimony, it is likely that the G7 - which groups the United States, Canada, Great Britain, France, Italy, Germany and Japan — will issue a final communique at the end of the summit, a diplomatic source said. 

On Saturday, Trump arrived late for the first working session on gender equality but Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau forged ahead with opening remarks without him, commenting wryly about “stragglers.”

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