Anchor

Bolton's memoirs also contain many claims that undermine Korea's role in North American relations. Bolton wrote that during the North-South meeting in Panmunjom last June, the United States and North Korea did not want President Moon Jae-in to accompany him.

Correspondent Correspondent Sohn Seok-min of Washington continues to report.

<Reporter>


On the 30th of June last year, the North American summit meeting at Panmunjom attracted attention due to the meeting of the century.

At the summit between the United States and South Korea just before the meeting, former US adviser Bolton argued that President Moon Jae-in has repeatedly been asked to accompany Panmunjom.

When President Kim Jong-un stepped into South Korea, he said he would not look appropriate if he was not there, saying that Secretary of State Pompeo intervened and offered President Moon's views the night before, but North Korea refused.

President Trump doesn't want to miss this big opportunity, but the secret service is coordinating the schedule, compelling him to follow, but Moon said he would accompany him to the Demilitarized Zone and eventually made it through.

Bolton also expressed uncomfortable feelings throughout the memoirs of the Korean government's efforts to bridge North America.

The first North American summit proposal was not Chairman Kim, but the chief of Security Affairs for the Blue House of Justice, and the previous declaration was an idea of ​​Korea.

He also accused the Blue House of sharing the schizophrenic thoughts of cooperating with North Korea and the United States after the breakup of the second Hanoi summit.

If North Korea is not a concession, but a stumbling block to his assertion that it is a subject to be surrendered, the main content of the Bolton memoirs is to fight and criticize President Trump or anyone.