US President Donald Trump said he and North
Korea's Kim Jong Un have fallen "in love" –- their bromance fuelled by
"beautiful letters" he received from the leader of the nuclear-armed
state.
Trump on Saturday elevated his recent praise of
Kim to new heights, at a West Virginia rally in support of local
candidates for his Republican Party.
"And then we fell
in love -- OK? No really. He wrote me beautiful letters and they're
great letters. We fell in love," Trump told the crowd.
On
Monday at the United Nations General Assembly Trumplauded the North
Korean strongman -- who is accused by the UN and others of widespread
human rights abuses -- as "terrific", one year after Trump eviscerated
Kim from the same platform.
Trump followed those
comments by saying Wednesday he had received an "extraordinary letter"
from Kim, and sounded optimistic about prospects for a second summit
between the two leaders "fairly quickly."
Trump used
his debut address at the UN General Assembly 12 months ago to threaten
to "totally destroy" North Korea and belittle its leader as "rocket
man," prompting Kim to respond by calling the president a "mentally
deranged US dotard."
Those were among a series of
playground-type slurs the leaders of the two nuclear-armed states hurled
at each other, setting the world on edge.
Last August,
after US media reported Pyongyang had successfully miniaturized a
nuclear warhead to fit into a missile, Trump warned Pyongyang not to
threaten the United States or it would face "fire and fury like the
world has never seen."
Kim had earlier compared
comments by Trump to the bark of a "rabid dog," and Trump derided Kim as
a "sick puppy" -- before the apparent outbreak of puppy love.
Trump met Kim in Singapore in June for the first-ever summit between the two countries that have never signed a peace treaty.
The
summit led to a warming of ties and a halt in Pyongyang's missile
launches, but there has been little concrete progress since.
North
Korea's foreign minister Ri Yong Ho on Saturday told the UN there was
"no way" that his country would disarm first as long as the US to push
for tough enforcement of sanctions against Pyongyang.
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