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The memoirs of the former White House National Security Adviser Bolton are creating a great wave. President Trump replied that Kim Jong-un was open to sanctions at the request of President Kim Jong-un, and said he had arbitrarily decided to end the combined US-ROK training.

Correspondent Kim Soo-hyung in Washington.

<Reporter> At the

Singapore summit, President Trump called Chairman Kim Jong-un "really a good person with a smart, secret and sincere character," a former National Security Advisor to the White House, Bolton said in a memoir.

There is also a statement that Kim Jong-un responded that he was happy to agree to follow an'action-to-action' approach that phased out denuclearization and countermeasures.

When President Kim Jong-un asked if UN sanctions could be lifted, President Trump revealed that he was "open to the request to lift sanctions."

In particular, at the North American summit, he announced that the announcement that he would stop training in the ROK-US alliance was a decision made solely by President Trump without consulting with any of his staff.

In addition, former aide to Bolton accused US Secretary of State Stephen Vaughan, who had negotiated directly with North Korea as a special representative for negotiating with North Korea, that he had exposed US weaknesses without permission.

In response to the Justice Department's request to suspend the memoirs, former Bolton advisers also filed a lawsuit against the two sides for filing a lawsuit against each other.

Former White House Secretary-General Mulvenini, who appears several times in the memoirs, helped President Trump that the memoirs were virtually false.