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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Many Topics Including The Oldest Dinar Community. Copyright © 2006-2020


    Trump foresees the "summit" with his expectations. Kim's message awaits

    Rocky
    Rocky
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    Trump foresees the "summit" with his expectations. Kim's message awaits Empty Trump foresees the "summit" with his expectations. Kim's message awaits

    Post by Rocky Sat 02 Jun 2018, 1:36 am

    [ltr]Trump foresees the "summit" with his expectations. Kim's message awaits[/ltr]
    [ltr]Arab and international[/ltr]
     Since 2018-06-01 at 08:57 (Baghdad time)
    [ltr]Trump foresees the "summit" with his expectations. Kim's message awaits Aswerw4r[/ltr]
    [ltr]Follow-up of Mawazine News[/ltr]
    [ltr]WASHINGTON (Reuters) - US President Donald Trump on Thursday narrowed the chances of a quick deal with North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons as a Pyongyang delegation headed to meet Trump, carrying a message from North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Trump told Reuters on the presidential plane en route to South Texas that he still hoped to hold a summit with the North Korean leader on June 12 in Singapore.[/ltr]
    [ltr]"I would like to do it in one meeting, but many agreements do not go this way," he said, adding: "There is a very high probability that this will not happen in a meeting or two or three.[/ltr]
    [ltr]North Korea has rejected earlier US calls for its unilateral denuclearization, instead calling for a "phased" approach to completely free the Korean Peninsula from nuclear weapons, which also means removing the US nuclear umbrella, which protects South Korea and Japan.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Elimination of nuclear weapons[/ltr]
    [ltr]In Pyongyang, Kim said North Korea's desire for the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula remained "unchanged, consistent and consistent," but said he hoped to settle the issue of relations with Washington and the issue of denuclearization on the Korean Peninsula on a "phase One after the other. "[/ltr]
    [ltr]Kim said he hoped "a solution to the interests of the two countries would be achieved through a new approach in a new era and progress would be made in resolving issues through negotiation and effective and constructive dialogue."[/ltr]
    [ltr]Kim made the remarks during a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and the two men also agreed to hold a bilateral summit between the two countries this year.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Kim's message[/ltr]
    [ltr]The North Korean delegation, led by high-ranking official Kim Yong-chul, who held two days of talks in New York, will pay a rare visit to the White House on Friday and will receive a message from Kim, said US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The letter is likely to be in response to Trump's remarks a few days ago when he canceled the proposed summit with Kim, accusing Pyongyang of enmity, but urged the North Korean leader to contact or write to him if he changed his mind.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The message seemed to signal that the summit might go ahead. The past few days have seen diplomatic efforts to bring the proposed summit back on track.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Trump wants North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons in return for freeing economic sanctions, but believes Pyongyang's leadership regards nuclear weapons as crucial to its survival and says it can not abandon them without security guarantees.[/ltr]
    [ltr]In exchange for North Korea's abandonment of its nuclear weapons, Washington may ease its economic sanctions on Pyongyang, which could allow food and other aid to be channeled into North Korea and boost ties with South Korea.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The United States and South Korea have been at war with North Korea theoretically for decades, despite the end of hostilities in 1953, because no peace agreement was ever signed, but the fighting was halted by the truce.[/ltr]


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