SEOUL, South Korea — In a striking shift of tone, U.S. President Donald Trump abandoned his aggressive rhetoric toward North Korea on Tuesday, signaling a willingness to negotiate as he urged Pyongyang to “come to the table” and “make a deal.”
Trump, in his first day on the Korean Peninsula, again pushed Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons program, but sounded an optimistic note: “Ultimately, it’ll all work out.” And while he said the United States would use military force if needed, he expressed his strongest inclination yet to deal with rising tensions with Pyongyang through diplomacy.
“It makes sense for North Korea to come to the table and make a deal that is good for the people of North Korea and for the world,” Trump said during a news conference alongside South Korean President Moon Jae-in. “I do see certain movement.”
Trump said he’s seen “a lot of progress” in dealing with North Korea, though he stopped short of saying whether he wanted direct diplomatic talks.
Trump also underscored the United States’ military options, noting that three aircraft carrier groups and a nuclear submarine had been deployed to the region. But he said “we hope to God we never have to use” the arsenal.
And at an evening banquet, Trump teased an “exciting day tomorrow for many reasons that people will find out.” He did not elaborate.
During his first day in South Korea, Trump at least temporarily lowered the temperature on his usually incendiary language about the North. There were no threats of unleashing “fire and fury” on North Korea, as Trump previously warned, nor did Trump revive his derisive nickname for North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, “Little Rocket Man.”
But he did decree that the dictator is “threatening millions and millions of lives, so needlessly” and highlighted a central mission of his first lengthy Asia trip: to enlist many nations in the region, including China and Russia, to cut off Pyongyang’s economic lifeblood and pressure it into giving up its nuclear program.
Moon, who has been eager to solidify a friendship with Trump, said he hoped the president’s visit would be a moment of inflection in the standoff with North Korea and said the two leaders had “agreed to resolve the North Korea nuclear issue in peaceful manner” that would “bring permanent peace” to the peninsula.
“I know that you have put this issue at the top of your security agenda,” said Moon. “So I hope that your visit to Korea and to the Asia-Pacific region will serve as an opportunity to relieve some of the anxiety that the Korean people have due to North Korea’s provocations and also serve as a turning point in resolving the North Korean nuclear issue.”
Trump did bemoan that previous administrations had not handled Pyongyang, saying: “Now is not the right time to be dealing with this, but it’s what I got.”
He began his day in South Korea with a visit to Camp Humphreys, a joint U.S.-Korean military base, but even as he walked among the weapons of war, he struck a hopeful note, saying: “It always works out.”
Much as he did in Japan, Trump indicated he would place the interlocking issues of security and trade at the heart of his visit. He praised South Korea for significant purchases of American military equipment and urged the two nations to have a more equitable trade relationship. Moon said the two agreed on lifting the warhead payload limits on South Korean ballistic missiles and cooperating on strengthening South Korea’s defense capabilities through the acquisition or development of advanced weapons systems.
Trump also pushed his economic agenda, saying that the current U.S.-Korea trade agreement was “not successful and not very good for the United States.” But he said that he had a “terrific” meeting scheduled on trade, adding: “Hopefully that’ll start working out and working out so that we create lots of jobs in the United States, which is one of the very important reasons I’m here.”
At Camp Humphreys, Trump shook hands with American and Korean service members and sat with troops for lunch in a large mess hall, a visit intended to underscore the countries’ ties and South Korea’s commitment to contributing to its own defense.
But Trump was expected to skip the customary trip to the Demilitarized Zone separating the North and the South — a pilgrimage made by every U.S. president except one since Ronald Reagan as a demonstration of solidarity with the South.
Trump has not ruled out a military strike and backed up his strong words about North Korea by sending a budget request to Capitol Hill on Monday for $4 billion to support “additional efforts to detect, defeat, and defend against any North Korean use of ballistic missiles against the United States, its deployed forces, allies, or partners.”
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North Korea has fired off more than a dozen missiles this year, but none in nearly two months.
Trump and Moon agree on the need to pressure the North with sanctions and other deterrence measures. But Trump has repeatedly insisted that all military options are on the table and suggested that Moon was being too lenient on the North. Moon, meanwhile, favors dialogue as the best strategy for defusing the nuclear tension and vehemently opposes a potential military clash that could cause enormous casualties in South Korea.
Moon rolled out an elaborate arrival ceremony for Trump at South Korea’s stately presidential residence known as the Blue House. He made a point of saluting the recent gains of the U.S. stock market, a favorite Trump talking point, and congratulating the president a day ahead of the one-year anniversary of his election.
Associated Press writers Ken Thomas and Catherine Lucey contributed reporting from Washington.