I am on my way to Singapore where we have a chance to achieve a truly wonderful result for North Korea and the World. It will certainly be an exciting day and I know that Kim Jong-un will work very hard to do something that has rarely been done before...— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 9, 2018
Koreas agree to reunite families separated by the Korean War. 😊👍💞#OneKorea #EndOfWar #Prosperity #Freedom https://t.co/f8uxp2Te3p— Global Awareness 101 (@Mononoke__Hime) June 2, 2018
The Washington Examiner
written by Katelyn Caralle
Friday June 1, 2018
North and South Korea agreed on Friday to reunite families separated by the 1950-1953 by the Korean War, a major step as relations between the two former foes continues to warm.
The countries agreed to hold military and Red Cross talks later in June to work toward reducing tensions, and they also agreed to a meeting between senior officials to establish a liaison office at the border, the Associated Press reported.
In another attempt at reconciliations between the two nations, the talks in June will also include a discussion on combining teams for some sports at the Asian Games in August.
As the U.S. continues its push to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula, the South works on building a stronger, more trusting relationship.
“If we continue to engage with each other like we did today, there will be no problem that can’t be solved between the South and North,” South Korean Unification Minister Cho Myoung-gyon said after Friday’s meeting.
Congratulated for an apparent breakthrough in relations between South Korea and North Korea, South Korean President Moon Jae-in says, "It's President Trump who should receive the Nobel Prize." https://t.co/qqCd4ro3II— NPR (@NPR) April 30, 2018
NPR
written by Elise Hu
Monday April 30, 2018
Congratulated for an apparent breakthrough in relations between South Korea and North Korea, South Korean President Moon Jae-in said, "It's President Trump who should receive the Nobel Prize."
The remark follows Friday's historic summit between Moon and North Korea's Kim Jong Un, in which the two leaders agreed to work toward eliminating nuclear weapons and reaching a permanent peace deal on the Korean Peninsula — aspirations that the pair embraced without going into detail about how to achieve them.
Moon was responding to a letter from the wife of former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung — a leader who won a Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts at making peace with North Korea. The letter said Moon deserves a Nobel for his progress this time around with the North, triggering Moon's mention of Trump.
"It's President Trump who should receive the Nobel Prize. We only need to take peace," Moon said, as translated by NPR's Korean interpreter Se Eun Gong.
The comment about Trump came during a Cabinet meeting on Monday. The Blue House has confirmed the accuracy of the quote.
Moon has the political capital to make these kinds of statements about Trump, however eyebrow-raising they may be to his domestic constituents. That's because he's riding a popularity wave coming out of Friday's summit in the border village of Panmunjom. His approval rating soared to 86 percent following the meeting, up 12 percentage points since mid-April. Some 88 percent of South Korean respondents in a Hangil Research poll said they support the Panmunjom agreement that was struck with Kim.
The South Korean leader also has diplomatic reasons to keep Trump aligned with his goals for peace on the peninsula: Moon told his Cabinet he'd like to see South Korea "actively operate the trilateral channel for dialogue between the North and the U.S.," signaling Seoul will continue to play a mediating role as Pyongyang and Washington make their way toward their bilateral summit.
Moon and Trump spoke by phone Saturday to discuss the recent summit and Kim's pledge of unity and peace. The White House said they "agreed that the unprecedented pressure" put on North Korea by international sanctions "led to this significant moment."
In recent months, Trump has gone from engaging in a war of words with Kim to planning to hold a summit with the dictator — a meeting that is expected to take place within weeks. Before that encounter takes place, Trump also plans to meet with Moon.
If indeed the two Koreas — technically in a state of war for more than six decades — are indeed able to reach a lasting peace and bring about the "complete denuclearization" of the peninsula, it would seem certain that a Nobel Peace Prize would be in the offing. The big question would become: Who gets the prize?
The leaders of North and South Korea would be the most obvious choices — but Moon's idea about including Trump also echoes the sentiment of a crowd in Washington, Mich., where the U.S. president spoke on Saturday.
"Nobel! Nobel! Nobel!" the crowd chanted, interrupting Trump as he spoke about the signs of progress he's seeing on the Korean Peninsula.
"That's very nice, thank you," Trump replied. "That's very nice."
Straits Times published on May 1, 2018:
'I want to get peace": Donald Trump on North Korea
— Villi Wilson (@Conservative_VW) April 30, 2018A reporter yelled a question to President Trump on the White House grounds ... “do you think you deserve a Nobel Peace Prize?”
President Trump responded, “Peace IS THE PRIZE!”
Now that’s a President‼️👍🇺🇸
No pallets of cash— Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) May 10, 2018
No billions to regimes that hate US
No “flexibility” till after the election
No “what difference does it make”
No more trading terrorists for traitors
Instead, our President flexes the muscle of American force to deliver historic peace
Peace is the prize pic.twitter.com/qLq6XL1K3w
Kim Jong Un is releasing U.S. prisoners at the request of President Trump, before their meeting.— Alana Mastrangelo (@ARmastrangelo) May 2, 2018
A few days ago, reporters asked the President if he thinks he should receive a Nobel Peace Prize. Trump replied: "peace IS the prize."
The release of the three prisoners, all citizens of Korean descent, was in some ways the most tangible gesture of sincerity shown by North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, to improve relations w/USA after nearly seven decades of mutual antagonism. via @NYTimes https://t.co/FQtfKAgKyM— Maggie Kaigler (@newsgirl123456) May 9, 2018
ABC News, Australia published on May 10, 2018: Three Korean-Americans who were detained in North Korea for more than a year were greeted by US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump beneath a giant American flag after they returned to the mainland US early Thursday 10th May, 2018.
Fox News published on Jun 1, 2018: President Trump addresses the media after parting ways with North Korea's top spy, Kim Yong Chol.
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