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Trump blasts Sth Korea hours before summit with leader

26 August 2025 02:19 | News

US President Donald Trump criticized South Korea as a two -year alliance test with the new President Lee Jae Myung, with defense expenditures and trade tests, just a few hours before a summit.

On the social media, the leaders were preparing for their first summits on social media when they said “we cannot have a liquidation or revolution in South Korea, and ız We cannot have it and we cannot do business there”.

The explanations gave a dark mood that there were high -betting talks for Lee.

Conservative predecessor Yoon Suk Yeol began to work in June after an election called after it was removed for attempt to impose martial law in December.

The South Korean economy is largely relying on the US, Washington welcomes its security with unity and nuclear deterrence.

Lee wants to draw a balanced cooperation with the US while avoiding antagonizing China, South Korea’s best trading partner.

Trump did not explain the reasons for his complaint.

However, Korea’s far -right movement, especially on charges of provoking the uprising, were aligned with Evangelical Christians and supporters of Yoon.

These Yoon supporters see former presidents as communist persecution and corrected the allegations of tampering in the vote that brought Lee to power in June.

South Korea presidential office told local media that they have examined the issue.

The White House did not immediately answer the questions sent by E -mail about Trump’s shipment.

South Korea has long been in Trump’s targeted criticism of Trump, which has been called the “Money Machine”, which has benefited from American military protection.

“Regardless of how this special incident was played, Trump showed how unreliable and capricious he was, regardless of how this special incident was played, Mason said Mason Richey, a professor of Hankuk University of Seoul.

The two countries have lower negotiations on trade, nuclear energy and military expenditures.

Many senior officials, including the Minister of Foreign Affairs, ran to Washington at the weekend to solve the latest details.

According to a White House official, Trump planned to argue, “North Korea, defense stance, trade barriers, maritime security, American ship building, energy dominance and more”.

Analysts said that Lee’s goal of the meeting was to remove some of the most prickly problems, to leave a good impression, to connect with Trump personally and to avoid unpleasant surprises.

As a part of the summit preparations, Lee told journalists that the President read the “Trump: Art of the Agreement ında in memory of the President during his flight to Washington.

Donald Trump is expected to pressure the South Korean leader to spend more defense. (AP Photo)

Under heavy pressure from the Trump administration, South Korean negotiators provided a last -minute agreement to avoid the hardest of the new US tariffs last month, but they should still withdraw the details of billions of dollars in the promised investments.

“There are many important issues in the field of security,” Lee’s biggest policy assistant Kim Yong-Beom said last week.

“Our location is that trade is already completed last time. We hope that special application plans for trade will never be included in the summit or at least should be kept simple if discussed.”

Lee, who came to Washington on Sunday, will emphasize some of South Korea’s expected investments when he visits a shipyard in Philadelphia, owned by the Hanwha group after the summit.

Cooperation to assist the US shipbuilding sector is part of the wide tariff agreement between countries.

Trump is expected to put pressure on Lee to spend more defenses, including billions of dollars more, including billions of dollars in the maintenance of 28,500 American soldiers in South Korea.


AAP News

Australian Associated Press is a beating heart of Australian news. AAP has been the only independent national Newswire of Australia and has been providing reliable and fast news content to the media industry, the government and the corporate sector for 85 years. We inform Australia.

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