The Courts Are Guilty of Failing to Do Their Job
House Agrees to Senate-Backed DHS Funding Measure, But There's Still a Massive Hill...
GOP Senator Aims to Protect the Auto Industry From Chinese Intrusion...and He Got...
Nothing Scares Democrats More Than the Idea of Merit
The British Are Going
The Would-Be Assassin: The Problem Isn't Education — It's Ideological Isolation
Marriage: The Inequality Gap We Should Be Talking About
Hollywood Can Still Make Great Movies
Citizens Last: How the Democrat Party Stopped Pretending
Christians in Israel: The View of One Christian IDF Soldier
DOJ Weaponized Against Pro-Life Americans
Southern Poverty Law Center Labeled Me an Extremist. Now Everyone Can See the...
Ilhan Omar: The House Houdini’s Last Act?
The Political Rift Widens
That Was Fast: NYC's Socialist Mayor Already Begging for a Bailout
Tipsheet

South Korea's Foreign Minister: The Credit on North Korea Progress Clearly Goes to President Trump

South Korea's Foreign Minister: The Credit on North Korea Progress Clearly Goes to President Trump

For the first time since 1953, South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean Dictator Kim Jong Un walked hand-in-hand across the DMZ, crossing into each other's respective country. Later in the day after a series of meetings, the two leaders agreed to officially end the Korean War.

Advertisement

During an interview with CNN's Christiana Amonpour Friday, South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha credited President Trump for the progress being made.

"Clearly credit goes to President Trump. He’s been determined to come to grips with this from day one,” Kyung-wha said.

Meanwhile, the United States is taking a celebratory yet cautious approach to the progress. President Trump's meeting with Kim Jong Un is being planned for June, although a location has not been announced.

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement