Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Trump news on Youtube Jun 13 2018

Staying with the press conference.

President Trump said North Korean leader Kim Jong-un agreed to send back the remains of

Americans who died in the Korean War.

He also, rather controversially, added that he plans to end joint military drills with

South Korea.

Park Ji-won reports.

President Trump spoke to reporters for more than an hour Tuesday, starting at 4 p.m.,

Singapore time, touting one of the major achievements of the historic summit.

He emphasized that his administration has not only secured the release of three American

hostages,... but also the return of the remains of American P-O-Ws and those missing in action

during the Korean War.

The president added that he had received numerous calls and letters from the relatives of these

people... asking him to retrieve their loved ones' remains.

And President Trump said the repatriation process will start immediately.

"And it was pretty rough for them, to put it mildly, secured the commitment to recover

the remains, including, these are of fallen heroes and they are giving a commitment, they

are starting it immediately to recover the remains."

Regarding a question about whether the U.S. is willing to reduce its military capabilities...

in order to give North Korea the promised "security assurance" by the U.S., Trump said

he will not reduce any military capabilities, but he did say that the U.S. could be halting

or even ending annual joint military drills with South Korea.

"We've done exercises for a long period of time working with South Korea, and we call

them war games and I call them war games and they're tremendously expensive.

The amount of money that we spend on that is incredible.

(...) I think it's inappropriate to be having war games.

So number one we save money, a lot.

And number two it really is something that I think they very much appreciated."

Trump also said he'd like to bring U.S. forces stationed in South Korea back to their homes

in the U.S., although he stressed that now is not the time to consider that option.

"I want to get our soldiers out.

I want to bring our soldiers back.

We have right now 32-thousand soldiers in South Korea.

And I'd like to be able to bring them back home.

But that's not part of the equation right now.

At some point I hope it will be, not right now."

Regarding those remarks,...

South Korea's defense ministry issued a statement Tuesday evening,... saying that it needs to

carefully look at the motivations behind what was said... and did not comment further on

the matter.

Park Ji-won, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Trump says remains of Korean War POW/MIA to be returned to U.S. - Duration: 2:47.

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US Senate to Block Trump's Deal With Chinese Company ZTE - Duration: 0:57.

For more infomation >> US Senate to Block Trump's Deal With Chinese Company ZTE - Duration: 0:57.

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SCOTUS Just Handed Trump and GOP HUGE 'Voter Fraud' Victory Ahead of 2018 Midterms - Duration: 5:29.

We just can't stop winning!

In a five-justice majority, the SCOTUS voted to uphold Ohio's voter purge system.

The ruling finds that the process the state uses to remove inactive voters from their

rolls does NOT violate federal law.

This ruling goes a long way in helping to secure "voter integrity" and combat voter

fraud and illegals, or people unauthorized to vote, to cast a ballot.

Critics of the law, claim this is a way for Republicans to "purge" left-leaning voters

off the roll since they're the majority of past voters being purged.

From Daily Caller

A five-justice majority of the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Ohio's voter purge system,

finding the process by which the state removes inactive voters from the rolls does not violate

federal law.

Although critics of Ohio's practice charge the state's true purpose is the removal

of left-leaning voters from the registry, the high court found the process is consistent

with federal law.

"Today's decision is a victory for election integrity, and a defeat for those who use

the federal court system to make election law across the country," Ohio Secretary

of State John Husted said.

"This decision is validation of Ohio's efforts to clean up the voter rolls and now

with the blessing nation's highest court, it can serve as a model for other states to

use."

Justice Samuel Alito wrote the Court's opinion, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices

Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch.

Justice Stephen Breyer led the liberal bloc in dissent, joined by Justices Ruth Bader

Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.

Ohio's maintenance process is fairly straightforward.

Voters who do not cast a ballot during a full federal election cycle (which runs two years)

are sent a mailer confirming they are still residents of Ohio who wish to remain registered

voters.

If the mailer is not returned, and if the individual does not vote for the next four

years, they are removed from state rolls.

The 1993 National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) requires all states to adopt policies providing

for the removal of ineligible voters from state rolls.

In his opinion for the Court, Alito claimed 24 million voter registrations are currently

"invalid or significantly inaccurate," according to a 2012 study from the Pew Center

on the States.

However, the NVRA forbids removal "by reason of the person's failure to vote."

Civil rights and good government groups challenged the Ohio procedure, arguing it targets and

prunes voters on the basis of their inactivity.

Nonvoting, the challengers point out, is used twice by the state's process: once as the

trigger for the mailer, and again as a condition for final removal.

But Alito explained that the NVRA only prohibits the use of nonvoting as the sole cause for

deregistration.

"We reject this argument because the Failure-to-Vote Clause, as originally enacted in the NVRA…,

simply forbids the use of nonvoting as the sole criterion for removing a registrant,

and Ohio does not use it that way," he wrote.

Sotomayor wrote her own dissent connecting Ohio's procedure to "concerted state efforts

to prevent minorities from voting and to undermine the efficacy of their votes," that the NVRA

sought to curtail.

Progressive organizers hit a similar tenor speaking after the ruling.

"Countless voters, including homeless and housing-insecure Ohioans, have already been

stripped of their rights as a result of Ohio's unjust and illogical purge process," said

Chris Knestrick, executive director, Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless.

"By greenlighting Ohio's purge process, the Court allowed states to shut out the voices

of these voters."

Defenders of the process say it ensures the states maintain accurate voter rolls, which

are not often updated to reflect forms of attrition like death or relocation.

Opponents charge it is yet another iteration of GOP voter-suppression tactics, particularly

because nonvoting is a poor proxy change in residence.

The civil rights groups challenging Ohio's policy seized on this point, citing another

provision of the NVRA which permits states to use U.S. Postal Service (USPS) data when

sending confirmation mailers of the sort Ohio uses.

This, the plaintiffs said, indicates that states may only use data points with a high

degree of correlation to relocation as a trigger for the mailer, like USPS information or tax

records.

But Alito rejected that arguments as well, stressing that their role was not to scrutinize

the good faith policy judgements of Ohio's state legislature.

"What matters for present purposes is not whether the Ohio legislature overestimated

the correlation between nonvoting and moving or whether it reached a wise policy judgment

about when return cards should be sent," he wrote.

"For us, all that matters is that no provision of the NVRA prohibits the legislature from

implementing that judgment."

Some 30 states filed amicus (or "friend-of-the-Court") briefs in the dispute.

A coalition of 12 Democratic states filed a brief arguing Ohio's practices were unlawful,

while 17 Republican states urged the high court to uphold them.

For more infomation >> SCOTUS Just Handed Trump and GOP HUGE 'Voter Fraud' Victory Ahead of 2018 Midterms - Duration: 5:29.

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Trump Didn't Just Settle For Denuclearization, He Also Accomplished THIS Amazing Feat With Kim - Duration: 3:22.

For more infomation >> Trump Didn't Just Settle For Denuclearization, He Also Accomplished THIS Amazing Feat With Kim - Duration: 3:22.

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Donald J. Trump: AMERICAN GOD - Duration: 1:19.

Donald J. Trump

America's most kick-ass president ever!

More famous than dirty hippy Jesus

he's so fucking classy...

he even shits in a solid gold toilet!

Real men love The Donald because

he fucks super-hottie porn stars...

playmates...

and mail-order bimbos

And they BEG FOR MORE

Because his dick is SO HUGE!

Donald Trump is such a GOD

He even fucks the CLOUDS!

Now he's balls-deep...

plowing America's tight little shithole

And she is LOVING IT!

So drop trou and get ready, bitches

because a vote for Donald Trump

earns YOU a sweet ass-fucking, too!

Right up your clammy-white turd-cutter.

Ooooooh yeah!

Paid for by Fuck Democracy USA

and Evangelical Power-Bottoms LLC

For more infomation >> Donald J. Trump: AMERICAN GOD - Duration: 1:19.

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Trump & Kim - Ober sticht Unter - Duration: 4:05.

For more infomation >> Trump & Kim - Ober sticht Unter - Duration: 4:05.

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SCOTUS Just Handed Trump and GOP HUGE 'Voter Fraud' Victory Ahead of 2018 Midterms - Duration: 5:28.

For more infomation >> SCOTUS Just Handed Trump and GOP HUGE 'Voter Fraud' Victory Ahead of 2018 Midterms - Duration: 5:28.

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If Trump Fires Attorney General Sessions, He's Got A Perfect Replacement Lined Up - Duration: 2:19.

The strain between President Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions has been intensifying

in recent months.

It all began in March of 2017, when Sessions recused himself from the Russia probe, completely

against Trump's orders.

Since then there have been numerous moments where Sessions appeared to be rebelling against

the president.

Trump tweeted a few months later that Sessions was not properly looking into Hillary Clinton's

email scandal or Clinton's ties to Uranium One.

Trump has proven in the past that he is not afraid to fire people who fail to live up

to his high standards.

Sessions no longer appears to be loyal, and that has paved the way for Trump to reportedly

consider hiring a new Attorney General: she is a conservative ally in the press and entertainment

field, and could now become a part of Trump's team.

From Politico:

"Jeanine Pirro has a top-rated Fox News show and a forthcoming book — 'Lies, Leakers,

and Liberals' — but she still wants to be President Donald Trump's attorney general.

A former prosecutor and judge, Pirro has repeatedly told Trump's aides and advisers over the

past 18 months that she's interested in taking over as the nation's top law enforcement

official, according to four people familiar with the conversations.

Trump has dangled the possibility of giving her a top appointment.

During a November meeting in the Oval Office, the president raised the possibility of nominating

Pirro to a federal judgeship, according to a former administration official."

Pirro has been an avid defender of Trump since before his election.

The two have a relationship that spans decades and while Trump is a fan of Pirro's, Pirro

has never been a fan of Sessions.

She stated on her show recently that the attorney general is the biggest threat to the President's

agenda, and called Sessions, "the most dangerous man in America."

Trump may be coming around to agree, too, and he has been favorable in the past towards

the possibility of an Attorney General Pirro.

In fact, he wanted to appoint her as the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York,

but was talked out of it by senior aides.

What do you think of the idea of Jeanine Pirro taking over as Attorney General?

Let us know in the comments below.

For more infomation >> If Trump Fires Attorney General Sessions, He's Got A Perfect Replacement Lined Up - Duration: 2:19.

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The Beat With Ari Melber 6/12/18 | Breaking News Trump Today - Duration: 1:48.

For more infomation >> The Beat With Ari Melber 6/12/18 | Breaking News Trump Today - Duration: 1:48.

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SINGAPORE Unscripted Moments Steal the Show at Trump Kim Singapore Summit - Duration: 7:34.

SINGAPORE Unscripted Moments Steal the Show at Trump Kim Singapore Summit

For more infomation >> SINGAPORE Unscripted Moments Steal the Show at Trump Kim Singapore Summit - Duration: 7:34.

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Analysis | Aiming at AT&T and Time Warner, Trump shot from the hip and missed - Duration: 5:23.

President Trump knew right away how he felt about AT&T's proposed $85 billion acquisition of Time Warner

He hated it. "It's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few," Trump said on the day the deal was struck in October 2016, adding that, if he were elected, his administration would block the purchase

Judge Richard Leon considered the matter for several months and in a lengthy opinion on Tuesday ruled that Trump's take, shot from the hip, was off the mark

The merger of media giants can move forward, despite legal objections by the Justice Department

[AT&T-Time Warner merger approved, setting the stage for more consolidation across corporate America] Trump often touts his instincts, particularly in the dealmaking realm

"My whole life has been deals," the president said earlier on Tuesday in Singapore, when asked how he could know whether North Korea is serious about its stated commitment to denuclearize

"I just feel very strongly — my instinct, my ability or talent — they want to make a deal," he added

Yet in the AT&T-Time Warner case — a question of antitrust law, not a clash of personalities — the president's gut steered him wrong and might have contributed to a high-profile defeat for his Justice Department

Rudolph W. Giuliani, one of Trump's personal attorneys, insisted last month that the president did not pressure the Justice Department to file the lawsuit that led to Tuesday's ruling

"He told me directly he didn't interfere," Giuliani told CNN. By then, however, Giuliani was doing damage control after appearing to let slip that Trump had, in fact, directed his administration's opposition to the deal

"The president denied the merger," Giuliani had told HuffPost, suggesting Trump, rather than Attorney General Jeff Sessions, made the decision to sue

Whether Trump gave an order or not, it would have been easy for Sessions, a frequent target of public criticism by Trump, to know how to please the president

And there are several reasons to think it was Trump who, directly or indirectly, sent the Justice Department on a doomed mission

For one thing, as Vanderbilt Law School professor Rebecca Haw Allensworth told the Fix when the suit was filed, the Justice Department made "the kind of argument that hasn't been made by any Republican, conservative administration ever

" Trump, far more than Sessions, likes to flout GOP orthodoxy. For another thing, "vertical mergers are almost never challenged," Penn Law School professor Christopher S

Yoo told me. A "vertical" merger combines companies that represent different links in a supply chain

Time Warner produces content; AT&T distributes content. An example of a "horizontal" merger would be the purchase of one content producer by another

Horizontal mergers typically receive more regulatory scrutiny because they tend to leave consumers with fewer options

There is one more thing, too: As he staked his position 20 months ago, Trump noted that the proposed deal involved his least-favorite TV channel, CNN

As the case progressed, the president derided CNN as "fake news" and said the job of its president, Jeff Zucker, is in jeopardy

Trump seems to feel betrayed by Zucker, with whom he worked on "The Apprentice" at NBC

Trump also came out in favor of another media merger, Disney's proposed $52 billion acquisition of most of 21st Century Fox, which is owned by Fox News boss Rupert Murdoch

The president's inconsistent views may have been influenced, in part, by personal preferences

It is hard to imagine that Sessions, left to his own devices, would have brought such an unusual case that eschewed Republican business principles

Trump made a snap judgment, as a candidate, and when the Justice Department followed through on his wishes, the result was a major loss

For more infomation >> Analysis | Aiming at AT&T and Time Warner, Trump shot from the hip and missed - Duration: 5:23.

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Canada parliament condemns Trump's attacks on Trudeau and tariffs - Duration: 2:26.

Canadian lawmakers unanimously voted to oppose the U.S.' "illegitimate tariffs" on Canadian steel and aluminum and condemned disparaging statements made by the Trump administration about Canada

The motion, which Reuters noted was introduced by the opposition New Democrats, "rejects disparaging ad hominem statements by the U

S. Administration which do a disservice to bilateral relations and will fail to resolve this trade dispute

"Over the weekend, President Trump suddenly retracted his endorsement of the final joint statement by the G-7 summit of world leaders, tweeting afterward he had instructed representatives "not to endorse" it

He blamed Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's statement afterward that Canada would not be "pushed around

" Trudeau, at a press conference at the end of the summit, had announced that Canada's retaliatory tariffs against the U

S. would go into effect July 1. He told reporters that he had informed Mr

Trump that "it would be with regret, but it would be with absolute clarity and firmness that we move forward with retaliatory measures on July 1, applying equivalent tariffs to the ones that the Americans have unjustly applied to us

"  Mr. Trump called Trudeau "very dishonest & weak" for his objections to the U

S. tariffs.  Others in the administration also chimed in. White House trade adviser Peter Navarro told "Fox News Sunday, "There's a special place in hell for any foreign leader that engages in bad faith diplomacy with President Donald J

Trump and then tries to stab him in the back on the way out the door

" (Navarro apologized for the remark Tuesday).Mr. Trump's top economic adviser, Larry Kudlow had also suggested on "Face the Nation" that Mr

Trump saw Trudeau as trying to weaken his hand before his summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, saying the president won't "allow the people to suddenly take pot shots at him

"  

For more infomation >> Canada parliament condemns Trump's attacks on Trudeau and tariffs - Duration: 2:26.

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Trump, Kim Finally Meet - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Trump, Kim Finally Meet - Duration: 1:02.

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Kim and Trump sign Joint Statement after their summit on June 12th - Duration: 2:26.

We begin with the North Korea-U.S. summit.

After both sides took turns backing out and in again, and months of anticipation... it

finally came together in Singapore on Tuesday.

The grand finale was the signing of a joint statement.

U.S. President Donald Trump was happy,... but questions are raised about the lack of

specific details.

Lee Ji-won reports from Singapore.

North Korea and the United States reached a new milestone, namely the June 12 Singapore

Joint Statement.

It states that the two leaders conducted an in-depth and sincere exchange of opinions

on the issues related to the establishment of a new Pyongyang-Washington relationship,...

as well as building a lasting and robust foundation that leads to peace on the Korean peninsula.

The major point of this summit was also concisely stipulated.

U.S. President Donald Trump committed to providing security guarantees to North Korea, and conversely,

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un reaffirmed his unwavering commitment to complete denuclearization

of the Korean peninsula.

Agreeing that the development and improvement in their bilateral ties will contribute to

the peace and prosperity of the Korean Peninsula and of the world, as well as recognizing that

mutual confidence can promote the denuclearization of the peninsula, the two leaders signed on

four clauses.

First, Pyongyang and Washington will commit to establish new relations in accordance with

the desire of their respective peoples for achieving peace and prosperity.

Second, the two sides will join the efforts to build a lasting and stable peace regime

on the Korean peninsula.

Third, North Korea reaffirms the Panmunjom Declaration signed with South Korea,... and

commits to work toward complete denuclearization of the peninsula.

And finally, North Korea and the U.S. commit to recovering remains of Prisoners Of War

and Missing In Action soldiers from the Korean War, nearly 70 years ago,... including the

immediate repatriation of those already identified.

"While the joint statement did not list out details on North Korea's denuclearization

as many had expected it would,... Kim and Trump are confident and optimistic that this

promise will open a new era of peace and prosperity on the Korean peninsula.

Lee Ji-won Arirang News, Singapore."

For more infomation >> Kim and Trump sign Joint Statement after their summit on June 12th - Duration: 2:26.

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Trump shows Kim U.S. gov't made video on regime's possible future during summit - Duration: 0:42.

And before U.S. President Donald Trump took to the podium for his press conference,...

there was a video that played.

That Hollywood-style video casts the two leaders Kim and Trump as the heroes of a story on

"two men, two leaders, one destiny."

This four-minute video was an overall pitch that reaching a deal between North Korea and

the U.S. would bring an advanced technology and economy to that regime, perhaps including,...

as Trump suggested, some real estate development.

The clip was also presented to Kim Jong-un on Trump's iPad during their summit on Tuesday.

For more infomation >> Trump shows Kim U.S. gov't made video on regime's possible future during summit - Duration: 0:42.

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Trump prepara video para Kim | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 1:30.

For more infomation >> Trump prepara video para Kim | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 1:30.

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President Trump Makes History with Kim Jong Un! (And Exposes the Media At The Same Time!) Trump-Kim - Duration: 4:04.

For more infomation >> President Trump Makes History with Kim Jong Un! (And Exposes the Media At The Same Time!) Trump-Kim - Duration: 4:04.

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Tucker: What CHINA wants from the TRUMP-KIM summit - Duration: 10:57.

Fox's Catherine Harridge is reporting tonight that rod Rosenstein threatened

to subpoena emails and phone records from Republicans on the House

Intelligence Committee in January it's an explosive story we're gonna ask the

Attorney General about it directly in just a minute good evening and welcome

to Tucker Carlson tonight the first ever meeting between a sitting American

president and a North Korean leader has finished president Trump and Kim jong-un

met one another in Singapore but their names on a new deal that seeks to reduce

tensions on the Korean Peninsula what's in the deal and what else has happened

in the summits wait for that we go to chief national correspondent and Henry

who was in Singapore right now it took her great to see you president Trump

came he saw and he got a deal despite all of the naysayers trying to talk down

the possibility of American success before during and after these talks the

president tonight in fact is going to go on offense try to sell this deal on

Hannity next hour telling Fox that Kim jong-un is going to start D

nuclearization virtually immediately with the document they signed here which

he says could save millions of lives by preventing nuclear war remarkable coming

just weeks after North Korea again threatened a nuclear conflict during one

of their walks together Kim was actually overheard through his interpreter

telling the president these pictures were so surreal that many in the world

quote will think of this as a form of fantasy from a science fiction movie

Democrats like Chuck Schumer tonight a warning this may be an actual fantasy

since Kim made no specific commitment to get rid of his nukes while the president

promised to end joint military exercises with South Korea that has some of our

allies concerned but Republicans like Senator John Kennedy today think

unbalanced this is a good agreement Kennedy said saying today that working

with Kim is like hand-feeding a shark you can do it but you've got to do it

very very carefully Tucker

great metaphors great thanks that is the New Deal with North Korea actually a

deal is good for the United States can we trust the North Koreans to follow it

Doug McGregor is retired US Army colonel author of the book margin of victory

congressman Jeff Fortenberry is a Republican represents the state of

Nebraska and both of them join us tonight

congressman first to you is this a deal Americans ought to be happy about well

the best word that I can use to describe the last few days in my mind is stunning

I think the president's actions here are bold they're historic it's almost

unimaginable given where we were just six months ago where we were on the

precipice of some type of even potential nuclear exchange

the president has leaned into something pretty radical here and perhaps he's

creating a new architecture for 21st century diplomacy he has said to Kim

Jong young we're going to deal with you for good or for ill and if it's for ill

and you move your finger toward a nuclear button we're going to hurt you

but if it's for good I want to create the space for perhaps authentic dialogue

and even friendship and I think he accomplished that he has rejected the

norms of ossified procedural ISM and stagnation that governs so many

international affairs and he took a bold risk and I think he delivered something

very important this first step we are holding out hope obviously for our

greater vision that could evolve here but it's an important and good first

step ossified procedural ISM a phrase I'm

stealing Myrtle are you as optimistic about it extremely I think this is

Donald Trump's finest hour and I'm absolutely serious

this is Donald Trump has recognized something that others have refused to

see for a very long time in Washington it's not simply that North Korea is on

the ropes it is it's on the verge of collapse Donald Trump understood that

and that's one of the reasons he was able to put the pressure on North Korea

the way he did but he also went to great lengths in his meetings with the

president G to forge an understanding with China he treated President Xi as an

equal treated China is an equal and I think Donald Trump understands something

that is not well understood in the Pentagon at this point or in many other

places in Washington and that our competition with China is essentially

economic and technological it is not military and

that was the key development because without China none of this would have

happened yes that's right and I think it clearly stemmed from what he said about

trade with China congressman there's been a lot of criticism of this deal

from the left along the lines that the president is giving away important

American advantages in exchange for nothing how would you respond to that

this is the combination of foreign policy realism and entrepreneurial

diplomacy and as I said this is not only about potentially preventing a conflict

and opening up a new chapter and in rejecting a stalemate of the last 65

years with North Korea but it also could signal a new way a new architecture for

diplomatic relations moving forward look the world is screaming for some type of

new interpersonal ecosystem both in our homes and in our communities as well as

between nations and what that means is that we have to have the ability to

reach out and provide authenticity and dialogue and create some space because

the world is

you

racing toward destructive technology and then what civilization itself is at

stake and we've got to find a way talk forward toward mutuality and well-being

and mutual security and or elsewhere where we don't have much hope but I mean

Colonel that's a lot of what we have heard liberals and some conservatives by

the way criticize the idea that you meet with someone who is morally

out-of-bounds like Kim jong-un going forward should we

be willing to meet with anybody oh absolutely and I think Donald Trump is a

disruptive force let's be frank he's disrupting the status quo lots of people

in this town are very upset because this threatens to change the distribution of

cash this threatens budgets this threatens force structures this

threatens a number of things he recognized early on when he was

campaigning that South Korea is a powerful state infinitely more powerful

than North Korea and quite capable of defending itself he recognized that

Japan is also in the same position in fact if Japan raises its investment in

military power by just 1% Japan will be number 3 in the world in terms of a

defense budget he understands that what Northeast Asia once and needs is

stability order and prosperity not war and I think he's got the agreement of

everyone who counts in the region that's an amazing statistic about Japan by the

way which most of us consider demilitarized apparently not Colonel

congressman thank you both very much thank you really thank you

well effect all this somewhat have on the rest of Asia a meaningful question

for the rest the world Michael Pillsbury is the man to answer it he's a senior

fellow and director of Chinese strategy the Hudson Institute author of maybe the

single best book recently on China called the hundred years marathon

China's secret strategy to replace America as the global superpower

dr. Pillsbury joins us tonight so what effect

Michael Pillsbury does this have on the rest of Asia if any right now well it

doesn't have much effect on the rest of Asia until more is revealed by President

Trump of what the next steps are going to be he's laid the foundation for

moving forward he's sent secretary Pompeo up to Beijing I myself am heard

from the Chinese already that they are taking credit for this a little bit hurt

that President Trump did not give them any credit when he was in Singapore they

feel they sent the plane they put the pressure on they did the sanctions they

voted for these UN Security Council resolutions three times it made the

toughest sanctions in history they all but pushed Chairman Kim into this and

here is their friend Donald Trump you know not tipping his hat to them so but

the president as you know is not poisonous you think of the Chinese

Politburo is having a heart and being having its feelings hurt that's so

interesting well we don't care if their feelings are hurt I'm going to Beijing

tomorrow so I got to be careful what I say Tucker yes but I would say a

reaction in Asia depends on how much concern they had about any given country

had about nuclear weapons in North Korea so down in Southeast Asia this is not

really a topic much they're much more concerned about the South China Sea is

the u.s. really going to have some ships that go inside the 12-mile

boundary and then have helicopter operations or swerve around and not

request innocent passage this is not a technical matter under the law of the

sea if there are five things that if you do that you are saying I dispute that

this claim we have not done those five things we usually go in with our radar

turned off we don't do swerving turns we don't launch helicopters so we're

recognizing the Chinese claim at the same time more mildly challenging this

is a big issue in Southeast Asia when Taiwan you know they're still

waiting for the f16 replacements they ask for 55 f-16 jet fighters about ten

years ago forty-eight or so US senators wrote a letter they held up the deputy

secretary of state give these jet fighters said I want their for sale

they're not really gifts that just still not happen so Taiwan is kind of

wondering what is their future in Japan they've got a series of issues they want

to hear more about so the North Korea issue as you know very well tucker is

really a bit more about the United States feeling vulnerable to a kind of

crazy person with h-bombs and 50 ICBMs if that's what it should

come to that problem seems to be taking care of so Americans can be happy

I'm a cute admirer president Trump he's done something for us but the rest of

Asia is still waiting for answers to a broader Asia strategy I think then

president Trump is working on that that's what his team has been telling me

I'd be worried if I lived in Taiwan Pachelbel's right thank you very much

great to see Ike you missed a few months ago the press was upset about president

Trump's overly aggressive posture toward North Korea now they're claiming he is

too friendly North Korea will try to make sense of that next

For more infomation >> Tucker: What CHINA wants from the TRUMP-KIM summit - Duration: 10:57.

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President Trump Heads Back To Washington After Historic Meeting With North Korean Dictator Kim Jong - Duration: 0:33.

For more infomation >> President Trump Heads Back To Washington After Historic Meeting With North Korean Dictator Kim Jong - Duration: 0:33.

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President Trump One-on-one With Sean Hannity - Duration: 5:31.

thank you very much historic day let's just I think most people like me want to

know what was going on in that room one on one well the big thing is this is now

my 25th hour of being up and negotiating and we've been negotiating very hard

this is about the complete verifiable irreversible denuclearization of the

entire Peninsula so without that we could not have had a deal I mean the one

thing I thought we want to de nuke the entire Peninsula we want to de nuke that

whole situation that is a hotbed and you know what's been happening for years and

nobody did anything about it and you have to we have no choice we had

to the relationship was really good the you know it built and I talked about

early on in the relationship and the feeling well we had a very good feel

right from the beginning and we were able to get something very important

done and actually some things happened after that was signed Sean where we're

getting rid of certain missile research areas certain missile testing sites

they're getting rid of a lot you know in the lead up to this and this was pretty

amazing because obviously I'm a pretty strong critic of our news media for that

country but a lot it happened he dismantled the nuclear test site he

crossed over the DMZ three hostages were released the missiles stopped being

fired he was willing he you wouldn't have come here if he did not if he was

not willing to talk about denuclearization that's right so all of

that happened before you walked in and I don't remember that you said cargo

planes a cache or gave anything really before the lead up why do you know that

you why do you think he's interested in doing this after spending that time with

no sort of interesting because I noticed some of the precedent I'm not even

knocking him because honestly that the treating we very good on this subject

what's the treat badly but some of the press would say he's meeting with them

and therefore he has a major loss I said since when and you know others wanted to

it never worked out it probably never could have worked out but we really have

got like you haven't seen missiles going up

in seven or eight months you haven't seen research you haven't seen nuclear

tests very importantly Japan is very happy because they're being encircled I

mean there was a period of time when they were going right over the middle of

Japan and we got our hostages back and you're right we didn't pay for that but

but I think I don't say that in a braggadocious way at all because he did

such a smart thing because that was such a good a good thing to do and and I feel

so badly about otto warmbier that was the one thing and Otto did not die in

vain I actually believe and I've gotten very friendly without as parents they're

incredible people devastated as they you know as you would think great parents he

was a great young man but I think without Otto this whole thing wouldn't

have happened because it crystallized when he came back in the condition it

crystallized so much to so many people maybe even to the other side frankly but

I think that Otto truly did not die in vain I've known you for a lot of years

and I think one trait that I could say is brutal honesty in the room alone and

then the subsequent talks with your team or in their team how honest how brutal

what was said bring it trying to bring people into the room so we got along

very well we get along from the beginning we started off he and myself

and two interpreters and from the beginning we got along you know I've

made the statement and I've said it before I've said it about a lot of

different kinds of relationships you can almost tell right at the beginning

did you tell at the beginning what was your what was that minute no I felt very

good at the beginning and we you know I talked about we have to denote this

country has to be deduct and he understood that he fully understood it

he didn't fight it and we're doing some great things and for his country and

South Korea is going to be involved very much in helping and Japan is going to be

involved and President Xi of China has been

you know really terrific on the border I think let's say the last couple of

months unfortunately not a big part but this your meetings when you've met with

the president of China was scheduled if I recall for like 15 minutes didn't

something go on for four hours but we actually met at mar-a-lago he wanted to

be at mar-a-lago and we had a 15 minute meeting scheduled when he comes then we

were going to go to breakout rooms where he had many people waiting for us and it

ended up lasting for hours the 15 minutes president of China great guy it

ended up lasting for four hours we just got along and we have got no long I mean

I wanted to treat us better and trade that's my only problem electro proper to

do things it's a tough thing you know they're doing so well they've made so

much progress against us for so many years it's awfully tough for them to

bring it back and we'll see how that all works out we're gonna we're gonna do

something definitely we're gonna do something you know they offered us

eighty billion dollars in purchases of agricultural products but it's just not

enough for what we're talking about eighty billion what do you want to

thought I turned down eighty billion dollars but we have to do something with

intellectual property we have to do something just generally on trade last

year we lost five hundred billion dollars with China we can't do that

anymore

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