YUGE! Trump’s Nobel Prize Is Looking Like a Reality After Everything He’s Recently Done!
Source: https://goo.gl/xfLkbH
As most of us Trump supporters have known from the beginning the president was bound to do some great things. But perhaps one of the greatest to date has been the peace talks between North and South Korea.
Last night, while some of his staff were at the White House Correspondents’ dinner, President Trump was busy holding a rally for his supporters in the red state of Michigan. But what was perhaps the most surprising was what the crowd kept chanting during his speech.
“Nobel, Nobel, Nobel” could be heard echoing through the arena of 10k people while 20k people waited outside because there wasn’t enough space to get in.
When President Trump heard the chants you could tell he was honored. He laughed and responded, “I just want to get the job done, Strength is going to keep us out of nuclear war.”
Trump then went on to mock the “fake news” media and his critics. Where instead of at least giving him credit for getting both parties together they are questioning the validity of the developments. To which the President repeated he was not about to play games with North Koreans dictator Kim Jong-un despite the positive signed he has shown towards bringing peace to the region.
Here is more on the North Korean story via ABC News:
“The top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee said there is “more than a ray of light” in the Trump administration’s dealings with Kim Jong Un over his nuclear program.
Rep. Adam Schiff of California responded to ABC News Chief White House Correspondent Jonathan Karl’s comment on “This Week” Sunday recalling what former President Obama told President Donald Trump about North Korea.
“I remember well when President Obama had his first meeting with President-elect Trump,” Karl said, “and he said that the biggest challenge in the new president’s agenda was going to be North Korea, and it looked — I mean it looked very dark, and now there is — there is an opportunity.”
Schiff responded, “There is more than a ray of light here.”
Asked if he believes Trump deserves some credit for the opening with North Korea, Schiff said, “I think it’s more than fair to say that the combination of the president’s unpredictability and, indeed, his bellicosity had something to do with the North Koreans deciding to come to the table. But before the president takes too much credit or hangs out the ‘mission accomplished’ banner, he needs to realize that we may go into a confrontational phase and he may not want the full blame if things go south.”
At a rally in Michigan on Saturday night, Trump spoke of the progress with North Korea, saying, “I had one of the fake news groups this morning. They were saying, ‘What do you think President Trump had to do with it?’ I’ll tell you what. Like, how about everything?”
The House Intelligence Committee’s ranking Democrat also said the Trump administration needs to be cautious in any negotiations with Kim Jong Un.
In previous talks, it has turned out that North Koreans “have something very different in mind when they talk about denuclearization: ‘Yes, if the U.S. gives up their nukes, we’ll give up ours; if the U.S. leaves the Korean Peninsula, then we can talk,’” Schiff said.
The question for the Trump administration over Kim Jong Un’s stated willingness to negotiate is, “Is this something new, or is this simply Kim Jong Un as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, who is in the phase right now of conciliation?” Schiff said.
North and South Korean leaders met Friday and vowed to formally end to their six-decade long war by the end of the year, and to work to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula.
PHOTO: President Donald Trump speaks during a joint press conference with Germanys Chancellor Angela Merkel in the East Room of the White House, April 27, 2018.Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
President Donald Trump speaks during a joint press conference with Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel in the East Room of the White House, April 27, 2018.more +
Schiff on “This Week” cautioned that the Trump administration’s threat to possibly pull out of the Iran nuclear deal could weaken its chances of success with North Korea.
“If we drop out of the Iran agreement, if we renege on the Iran deal when the Iranians are complying, it is, I think, dangerously naïve to think that this is not going to influence whether the North Koreans think we can be trusted and what’s more, whether the rest of the world will have confidence that the