Meeting between Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un
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September 6, 2022 - Join us for this roundtable and podcast recording on North Korea-China Relations after The Singapore Summit, with Dr. Seong-Hyon Lee, senior fellow at the George H. W. Bush Foundation and a visiting scholar at Harvard University's Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies. In conversation with policy director Jonathan Corrado, Dr. Lee's talk explores the evolving relationship between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, with a special focus on the time period between the U.S.-DPRK Summits in Singapore (June 2018) and Hanoi (February 2019). Dr. Lee scrutinizes documentary footage of the summits, reviews official Chinese and North Korean documents, and utilizes interviews with people in the know to reveal how Xi gradually increased his influence over Kim through their five summit meetings between March 2018 and June 2019. The talk concludes with some policy implications for the North Korean nuclear issue under the current Biden-Xi administrations. For more information, please visit the link below: https://www.koreasociety.org/policy-and-corporate-programs/item/1611-north-korea-china-relations-after-the-singapore-summit
MONEY FM 89.3 - Prime Time with Howie Lim, Bernard Lim & Finance Presenter JP Ong
Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat said on Tuesday that crypto assets are constantly evolving and highly risky, but have the potential to transform the future of finance. Mr Heng was speaking at the opening of the second Asia Tech x Singapore Summit organised by the Infocomm Media Development Authority. In The Straits Times' The Big Story, Multimedia journalist Hairianto Dirman spoke with Tech correspondent Rei Kurohi for highlights of that event. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
TMBS 44 aired on June 12, 2018. Episode summary: Michael talks about the Singapore Summit between Trump and Kim Jong Un noting the important history of the Korean War and the possibility of peace. Shoutout to Women Cross DMZ for their fearless leadership and work to bring peace to the Korean peninsula. Journalist Mike Hanna (@mjahanna) joins us by phone to talk about North Korea and the confusion about denuclearization, Iran, and the ongoing crisis in Gaza. David Griscom breaks down some important factors in the unemployment rates, the lack of productivity in the US, and why robots aren't taking your job. We throw a deserving counter-revolutionary, Luis Posada Carriles, into the gulag. Cody Johnston (@DrMisterCody) host of Some More News calls in to talk about the cult of Elon Musk. TMBS ReAirs come out every Tuesday wherever you get your podcasts and on The Michael Brooks Show YouTube Channel. This program has been put together by The Michael Brooks Legacy Project. To learn more and rewatch the postgame content visit https://www.patreon.com/TMBS
Renowned Singapore designer and co-founder of Song+Kelly, Wykidd Song, was known for putting Singapore’s name on the international fashion platform with the first Singapore Ready-To-Wear brand sold at internationally renowned stores such as Harrods, Selfridges, Barneys NYC, and more. But after the label closed in 2007, he left the country to pursue other creative interests, which included designing the APEC leaders’ attire for the Singapore Summit 2009. When he returned to Singapore, he felt inspired to create AKINN - a new platform where craft, design, and human stories converge. Wykidd Song and James Chua, Founder of GERMS & GERMS Creative Capital talks about the new label.
MONEY FM 89.3 - Prime Time with Howie Lim, Bernard Lim & Finance Presenter JP Ong
Moody's holds the Singapore Summit on Sept 6, and prior to that, Marie Diron, Managing Director for the Sovereign Risk Group, joined us on Prime Time, to talk about the road ahead for Asian corporate credit, the challenges posed by the trade war, the trend of lowering yields and demographic dividends and taxes seen in a region contrasted by young and aging populations all around.
Six months after the Singapore Summit, is North Korea honoring its commitment to move toward denuclearization? Bruce Klingner, Senior Research Fellow for Northeast Asia at The Heritage Foundation and Jean Lee, Director of the Hyundai Motor-Korea Foundation Center for Korean History and Public Policy at the Woodrow Wilson Center, discuss the impasse with host Carol Castiel.
Jacinda Ardern will dine with US Vice-President Mike Pence in Singapore this evening.The Prime Minister will be sitting next to the Pence at the leaders' gala dinner at the East Asia Summit in Singapore.It will be her first substantial engagement with the Trump administration. Ardern met Donald Trump at APEC in passing last year, but they did not have any formal meetings.ZB political editor Barry Soper told Andrew Dickens that Pence requested that Ardern be his dinner companion.Ardern says she doesn't plan on raising the CPTPP with Pence."I imagine that we will probably have a conversation about trade issues more generally. I will see where the conversation goes, but I will bring up steel and aluminium tariffs, it's in New Zealand's interests that I do."She says e a date at the White House isn't high on her agenda."That's not something that we're necessarily seeking. There is a strong relationship that will endure regardless of whether or not there are any explicit visits."Soper says that Ardern has a busy schedule."She'll be meeting with the Premier of China, and she'll also be meeting with [Australian Prime Minister] Scott Morrison from the first time ever."President Donald Trump isn't attending this year's summit.LISTEN TO BARRY SOPER TALK WITH ANDREW DICKENS ABOVE
President Trump Speech at the United Nations 2018 Best speech ever? Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity think so President Trump Returns to the U.N.—with a Mountain of Evidence for ‘Peace Through Strength’ September 25, 2018 5 minute read SHARE: ALL NEWS President Donald J. Trump helped kick off the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York City yesterday. Along with a series of bilateral meetings with allies this week, the President is addressing the full Assembly in a major speech Tuesday morning. “The scourge of our planet today is a small group of rogue regimes that violate every principle on which the United Nations is based,” President Trump told the Assembly last September. “They respect neither their own citizens nor the sovereign rights of their countries.” One year later, the bold diplomacy of the Trump Administration has diminished many of the threats the President cited that day, including the most critical ones from North Korea, Iran, and ISIS. Among these accomplishments, the historic Singapore Summit with North Korean Chairman Kim Jong-Un stands out, marking the first-ever face-to-face meeting between an American President and a North Korean head of state. At the summit, the two leaders committed to the complete denuclearization of the Korean peninsula. At last year’s UNGA, President Trump foreshadowed this development. “It is time for North Korea to realize that denuclearization is its only acceptable future,” he said. Just last week, leaders from both North and South Korea met to reaffirm that vision and begin drafting a plan to achieve it. Last year’s speech identified another significant threat to the American homeland: terrorism originating from turbulence in the Middle East. Two bad actors, ISIS and the Iranian regime, share much of the responsibility for the death and destruction. “We must deny the terrorists safe haven, transit, funding, and any form of support for their vile and sinister ideology,” President Trump said. The President has also condemned regimes’ and terror groups’ use of hostage-taking and prioritized the recovery of Americans held hostage or detained overseas. To eradicate the first of these threats, ISIS, President Trump changed the rules of engagement on the ground, empowering U.S. commanders with broader authority. The results are unmistakable. ISIS has lost nearly all of its territory, more than half of which was liberated in less than 18 months under the Trump Administration. The chips fell quickly. In October 2017, ISIS’ self-proclaimed capital city of Raqqah was liberated. By December, the Iraqi government announced that all Iraqi territory had been liberated from ISIS control. On Iran, President Trump used last year’s UNGA speech to reiterate his profound objections to a nuclear deal that put the interests of diplomats ahead of the Iranian people—and, indeed, peaceful people the world over. By lifting sanctions and unfreezing financial assets, the Obama Administration’s deal gave the Iranian regime a cash windfall while failing to advance America’s national security interests. “Rather than use its resources to improve Iranian lives, its oil profits go to fund Hezbollah and other terrorists that kill innocent Muslims and attack their peaceful Arab and Israeli neighbors,” President Trump said. “This wealth, which rightly belongs to Iran’s people, also goes to shore up Bashar al-Assad’s dictatorship, fuel Yemen’s civil war, and undermine peace throughout the entire Middle East.” In May, the President made good on his promise to withdraw the United States from that deal. A new agreement, he emphasized, must permanently deny Iran any path to a nuclear weapon and address the totality of the regime’s malign activities, including its support for terrorism. While North Korea, ISIS, and Iran constituted three of the biggest threats to peace, they were far from the only aggressors President Trump called out in New York last year: “The actions of the criminal regime of Bashar al-Assad, including the use of chemical weapons against his own citizens—even innocent children—shock the conscience of every decent person.” In April, the United States joined Britain and France in launching precision air strikes on targets associated with those chemical weapons capabilities. “The Venezuelan people are starving and their country is collapsing. Their democratic institutions are being destroyed. This situation is completely unacceptable and we cannot stand by and watch.” In March, the Trump Administration expanded its sanctions against Venezuelan leaders, upping pressure on the corrupt Maduro regime. “In America, the people govern, the people rule, and the people are sovereign. I was elected not to take power, but to give power to the American people, where it belongs. In foreign affairs, we are renewing this founding principle of sovereignty.” In keeping with that vision, National Security Advisor John Bolton announced this month that the Trump Administration would take all necessary steps to protect American soldiers and citizens from unjust prosecution by the unaccountable International Criminal Court. By prioritizing peace through strength, the rate of progress for American foreign policy over the past 12 months has been staggering. President Trump makes it clear that this work is only just beginning. On Tuesday in New York, he will build on last year’s message to the U.N.—that strong, sovereign nations must work side-by-side to confront the gravest threats to our civilization. “If the righteous many do not confront the wicked few, then evil will triumph.”
Since the Singapore Summit, Washington and Pyongyang have been mired in a stalemate over the sequencing of an end of war declaration and North Korea’s disarmament. Yet, even after the cancellation of Secretary Pompeo’s visit, USIP’s Frank Aum says talks will likely continue, as both sides are invested in a successful outcome.
Down to Business English: Business News to Improve your Business English
Skip Montreux and Dez Morgan discuss the recent summit meeting between US President Trump and North Korean Dictator Kim Jong Un Free audio script available at downtobusinessenglish.com Visit iTunes to subscribe to Down to Business English, rate the show, and leave a comment. Visit our website or Facebook page to ask a question, post a comment, and sign up for the Down to Business English Newsletter. Contact Skip, Dez, and Samantha at downtobusinessenglish@gmail.com Follow Skip & Dez Skip Montreux on Twitter Skip Montreux on Instagram Skip Montreux on Facebook Dez Morgan on Twitter RSS Feed
Brennan, Comey and Clapper are no longer in the government, but they’re still trying to bring down the president, why do they still have security clearances.In a positive sign from the Singapore Summit, North Korea is dismantling its missile test sights.And President Trump has established a American workers council, which begs the question: Why hasn’t this been done long ago.
In this new podcast series, we'll be connecting current events to Carnegie Council resources through conversations with our Senior Fellows. This week, Devin Stewart discusses how his essay defending the Singapore Summit holds up a month later. Plus, he and host Alex Woodson speak about Mike Pompeo's strange and unproductive trip to Pyongyang, what a "peace regime" could look like, and the prospects for a unified Korean Peninsula.
President Trump is visiting the UK this week in between summits with NATO and Russian President Putin. Agnes discusses the UK-US special relationship and European responses to the current President with Leslie Vinjamuri (Head of the US & Americas Programme) and Hans Kundnani (Senior Research Fellow in the Europe Programme). Another country adapting its foreign policy approach in light of an increasingly unpredictable US is Japan. A new special issue of International Affairs explores Japan's relations with its Asian neighbours. Ben speaks to Corey Wallace, one of the issue's guest-editor's, about Japan's response to the Singapore Summit, TPP and China's role in the region. Read the Expert Comment: To Engage America, Theresa May Should Recognize the Real Concerns that Trump Raises Read the International Affairs special issue: Japan's Pivot in Asia
In this new podcast series, we'll be connecting current events to Carnegie Council resources through conversations with our Senior Fellows. This week, Devin Stewart discusses how his essay defending the Singapore Summit holds up a month later. Plus, he and host Alex Woodson speak about Mike Pompeo's strange and unproductive trip to Pyongyang, what a "peace regime" could look like, and the prospects for a unified Korean Peninsula.
President Trump is visiting the UK this week in between summits with NATO and Russian President Putin. Agnes discusses the UK-US special relationship and European responses to the current President with Leslie Vinjamuri (Head of the US & Americas Programme) and Hans Kundnani (Senior Research Fellow in the Europe Programme). Another country adapting its foreign policy approach in light of an increasingly unpredictable US is Japan. A new special issue of International Affairs explores Japan's relations with its Asian neighbours. Ben speaks to Corey Wallace, one of the issue's guest-editor's, about Japan's response to the Singapore Summit, TPP and China's role in the region. Read the Expert Comment: To Engage America, Theresa May Should Recognize the Real Concerns that Trump Raises Read the International Affairs special issue: Japan's Pivot in Asia
The strains on the Liberal International Order continue apace. The antagonism between President Trump and allied leaders were on full display at the recent G7 Charlevoix meeting. Though the leaders had reached consensus on the Communique, Trump subsequently withdrew the U.S. endorsement and tweeted that Prime Minister Trudeau, the host of this year’s G7 was “Very dishonest & weak.” Now the allies are meeting at the NATO Summit on July 11-12, 2018 where President Trump is likely to press his view that the allies are failing to live up to the spending commitments. Meanwhile, President Trump continues his summit dialogues with rivals. First there was the recent ‘sunny’ Singapore Summit with Chairman Kim Jung Un of the DPRK. And, President Trump is scheduled to meet with President Vladimir Putin of Russia on July 16th. With all these summits as background, I sat down with Bruce Jentleson to explore Trump’s foreign policy and its consequences for the Liberal Order. Bruce is a very well-known Professor of Public Policy at Duke University where he served as Director of the now Sanford School at Duke (2000-2005). He also served as the Henry Kissinger Chair on Foreign Policy and International Relations (2015-2016) at the Library of Congress. And he has advised officials in Washington including senior foreign policy advisor to Vice President Al Gore. I was particularly interested in sitting down with Bruce for this podcast to review with him a recent article he had written for the journal Democracy called ‘The Liberal Order is Not Coming Back: What Next?’ and for the conclusions he had reached in his examination of key international relations’ actors in his recently released book The Peace Makers: Leadership Lessons from 20th Century Statesmen’.
A Canadian reviews the last month’s news with two special guests. Andrea talks to CNS Senior Research Associate Melissa Hanham and FAS Adjunct Fellow Ankit Panda as they go through the trajectory of U.S./DPRK diplomacy after the Singapore Summit, parse through the differences between U.S and DPRK public statements, and developments within the U.S./ROK Alliance. Links of Note NBC report on North Korea's additional enrichment sites and increased nuclear activity. Ankit's article in The Diplomat about the DPRK's additional missile TEL production in 2018. Support us over at Patreon.com/acwpodcast!
Nobel Peace Prize winner Tim Wright talks with the DH podcast on how we as a human race are moving toward complete denuclearisation. Tim works as the Treaty Coordinator for the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), who played the major role in garnering the signatures of 120 nations for the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. We discuss why countries like the UK, US, China, France, Russia and even Australia have refused to sign; along with recent events in North Korea and the Singapore Summit; the US decision to pull out of the UN Human Rights Council; and as always how to start a career as a activist or campaigner. Music: Jade by Scott Buckley
In this episode, we interview Dr. Nicholas Eberstadt about the historic Singapore Summit on June 12 between President Donald Trump and Chairman Kim Jong-un. Dr. Eberstadt discusses his key takeaways from the summit, what the summit means for U.S. allies and other stakeholders in the region, and what he’d like to see from the Trump administration moving forward.
This week, Ayesha Hazarika is joined by commentator Marie Le Conte and historian and UnHerd columnist, Michael Burleigh, to discuss the week's under–reported stories. Marie highlights the decline of the mainstream parties in France and asks, when voters get tired of Macron, where will they go? Michael focuses attention on the real winners of the Singapore summit, China and Russia. The panel also discuss, Lisa Nandy MP, Steve Hilton, and Matteo Salvini as their heroes and villains of the week.
Nobel Peace Prize winner Tim Wright talks with the DH podcast on how we as a human race are moving toward complete denuclearisation. Tim works as the Treaty Coordinator for the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), who played the major role in garnering the signatures of 120 nations for the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. We discuss why countries like the UK, US, China, France, Russia and even Australia have refused to sign; along with recent events in North Korea and the Singapore Summit; the US decision to pull out of the UN Human Rights Council; and as always how to start a career as a activist or campaigner. Music: Jade by Scott Buckley
On episode 16, we talk with Preston Wood, long time fighter for LGBTQ liberation and founding member of the Party for Socialism and Liberation. We assess the encouraging Singapore Summit between Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump with ANSWER Coalition activist Derek Ford. Editorial discussion about separated immigrant families, Yemen, Korea and the fact that it is the United States that cannot be trusted. LEAD OUT NOW info! https://www.patreon.com/CrashingtheSystem/overview https://www.gofundme.com/crashing-the-system-podcast http://leadoutnowchi.org/
Immigration woes. The Royal Ascot Races, the Queen, and all the Queen's women, men, ..., what about the horses? President Trump & Canadian PM Trudeau. The Singapore Summit & BFFs the Donald and the Young Un! Lil' Kim, Kim 3.0, Kim Young Un, Kim Jong Un scaled the summit and overthrew the proud "leader of the free world" with flattery, the same proud leader who was attempting to use massive flattery to manipulate the supposedly under-matched Kim!
Andrea Razali (@andrearazali on Instagram) calls in from Singapore to tell Turner (@TurnerBSparks) and Kaplan (@KapInAmerica) about her unique experience witnessing the Trump/ Kim Summit in Singapore first hand. Andrea is a make up artist based in Singapore and walks us through her full day doing make up for a German television station at the Singapore Summit last week. This episode is brought to you by Ense, available at www.Ense.nyc. This episode and every episode can be found at www.LostInAmericaPod.com For tickets to the Lost In America live podcast at Stand Up NY on July 11 go to www.StandUpNY.com Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
We went without an agenda, discussing a multitude of things such as the recent G7 Summit, Singapore Summit, the World Cup and the ongoing Immigration Crisis in the United States. Follow us on Twitter: @AlmostDiplo Disclaimer: The comments and views discussed in the podcast are our own and do not represent those of any entity we volunteer with or are employed by. Song: Jail Billz Arist: Weeping Icon
Larry P. Arnn joins Hugh Hewitt on this episode of Hillsdale Dialogues to discuss the Inspector General's report and the Singapore Summit.
The Irish Queer Archive. Imagine the warehouse from the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark crossed with the library from Hogwarts, but far more important and slightly more magical. In honor of Pride Week, we sit down with the Curator of the IQA, [Tonie Walsh](https://twitter.com/tonie_walsh), to discuss the festivals origins and the history of queer culture at home and abroad. Like the show? We'd appreciate a review on [Apple Podcasts](https://itunes.apple.com/ie/podcast/what-am-politics/id1200345868?mt=2) if you do. ----- Want to learn more about the Singapore Summit that we mentioned in the News? [Check out this article Steve wrote](https://www.thestevebyrne.com/blog/will-the-singapore-summit-lead-to-anything-of-substance). ----- [whatampolitics.com](https://whatampolitics.com/) Follow us on [Twitter](https://twitter.com/whatampolitics) Theme music by Supermarket Love: [Soundcloud](https://soundcloud.com/supermarketlove) | [Spotify](https://open.spotify.com/artist/5zCu0CM9BMBKjI2EWC2DgH) | [iTunes](https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/supermarket-love/id560396418)
Andy Wood (Probably Science, Bridgetown Comedy Festival) joins Emily and Micah to punch up some Huckabee Jokes deriding Robert DeNiro for taking a stand at the Tony's, and making fun of hearing loss in re: the Singapore Summit. One of them may just be the worst joke Gov Mike has ever tweeted! HEAR IT!
Larry P. Arnn joins Hugh Hewitt on this episode of Hillsdale Dialogues to discuss the Inspector General's report and the Singapore Summit.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Michael opens the show as he always does by checking in with Kenny Polcari to talk about the volatile day on Wall Street and the surprising news about GE. Next, Dan Mahafee from CSPC calls in to discuss the aftermath of the Singapore Summit, and the growing tension between the US and China over the trade war. And Michael wraps up by chatting with Mark Olson from Treliant Risk Advisors about the latest news from the Fed and whether the standard of living in the US will rise or decline in the coming years.
June 19, 2017 / Susan and Siraj discuss Trump's family separation policies and the continued fallout from the Singapore Summit. Today's episode is sponsored by AIG Travel Guard and Fabletics. AIG Travel Guard - Get coverage now for just $30 when you text 45TH to 484848. Fabletics - www.Fabletics.com/45TH. Episode scoring music by Broke for Free. #the45th #45thpod
Special guests Ambassador Robert King, the former special envoy for North Korean human rights issues, and Joseph Kim, a young man who defected from North Korea in 2006, discuss human rights in North Korea and the Trump administration’s position on the issue in the aftermath of the Singapore Summit. Download transcript here.
Special guests Ambassador Robert King, the former special envoy for North Korean human rights issues, and Joseph Kim, a young man who defected from North Korea in 2006, discuss human rights in North Korea and the Trump administration’s position on the issue in the aftermath of the Singapore Summit. Download transcript here.
Two years and a new baby are announced on this weeks pod and the boys go over the Singapore Summit, the repeal of the head tax in Seattle, AT&T purchasing Time Warner as well as more and necessary background on the baker in Colorado, Reality Winner vs. Paul Manafort, and of course SPORTS!
Opening Monologue: Our Crappy Institutions. Hostile to the American People and to the American Way of Life. A review of the latest Horowitz IG Report and its implications for the Criminal Deep State. Running out of reasons to trust the FBI, the DOJ and the rest of the Beltway Bureaucrats. We glimpse their contempt for Flyover Country as we consider the string of epithets they have used to describe the taxpayers who sustain their existence. But for how much longer? We analyze Peter Strzok's "smoking gun" text about the FBI's failed attempt to "stop" Trump. Also, President Obama suddenly caught in a lie of his own about Hillary's private email account. How will MSM find a way around that one? Plus, an unimpressed Sen. Chuck Schumer describes Trump's successful Singapore Summit as "all cattle, no hat." We love it when Chuck "Wagon" Schumer tries to talk Texan -- and gets it all backwards. We celebrate with a special rendition of "Rawhide." Hell Bent for Leather. With Listener Calls & Music via Mike Ness, Sade, Charlie Puth, Kehlani, Dwight Yoakam, Jim & Jesse and Frankie Laine. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Though it only includes 393 words, the signed agreement that resulted from President Donald Trump's June 12 meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore was hailed as a big win by both sides. The President tweeted the day after the summit that there was “no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea” and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the administration expected “major disarmament” by Kim's military before the end of Trump's first term, as reported in the Washington Post. North Korean state media also hailed the meeting as a major victory, describing a “step-by-step and simultaneous” process aimed at achieving peace and “denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.” But where do the U.S. and North Korea actually stand in the effort to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula? On this week's TrumpWatch, Jesse talks to Jenny Town, a research analyst at the Stimson Center and managing editor of 38 North.
Though it only includes 393 words, the signed agreement that resulted from President Donald Trump's June 12 meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore was hailed as a big win by both sides. The President tweeted the day after the summit that there was “no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea” and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the administration expected “major disarmament” by Kim's military before the end of Trump's first term, as reported in the Washington Post. North Korean state media also hailed the meeting as a major victory, describing a “step-by-step and simultaneous” process aimed at achieving peace and “denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.” But where do the U.S. and North Korea actually stand in the effort to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula? On this week's TrumpWatch, Jesse talks to Jenny Town, a research analyst at the Stimson Center and managing editor of 38 North.
Independent investigative journalism, broadcasting, trouble-making and muckraking with Brad Friedman of BradBlog.com
Today on The IROMG Mike and Katie Perrior speak to Jim Hoare about the Singapore Summit between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un.Gary is a first time caller and is glad to hear some refreshing radio and we learn that a lady's walk is as important as their body shape. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Singapore Summit created an unbelievable moment--will the agreement struck between President Trump and Kim Jung Un lead to peace in the Korean Peninsula? Jack & Joe begin the discussion within this episode of Armstrong & Getty
Foreign policy expert Michael Auslin joins Jack & Joe for this episode of Armstrong & Getty to discuss the Singapore Summit. Plus, Joe describes how historians will view Dennis Rodman's humanitarian efforts!
During this episode of Armstrong & Getty, Jack & Joe continue discussing the Singapore Summit. Is the President getting too close to a violent dictator?
During this episode of Armstrong & Getty, Ian Bremmer joins Jack & Joe to offer his perspective on the Singapore Summit between President Trump and Kim Jung Un, including his thoughts on the final outcome of the negotiations.
Guest host Peter Shurman talks with Executive Director for the Responsibility to Protect based at the Munk School of Global Affairs Tina J. Park about the potential measure of success of the meeting between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un.
During this episode of A&G, Jack has a very unique (and deadly) idea for how President Trump should handle himself during the Singapore Summit. Steven Nelson of the Washington Examiner joins the show to talk about the historic event.
During this episode of A&G, Jack & Joe talk about the death of Anthony Bourdain & the Singapore Summit. Plus, Marshall has the latest headlines
CBS News Military Analyst Mike Lyons joins Armstrong & Getty to talk about the historic summit happening in Singapore between President Trump & Kim Jung Un.
Steffan speaks with CBS military analyst Mike Lyons on the cancelled Singapore Summit. Sound of President Trump providing Medals of Honor at the White House today.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.