In a day, President Trump, who said that the massive explosion in Beirut, Lebanon, could have been caused by an "attack," said in a day, "No one can tell if it was caused by an attack."

President Trump answered the question in a press briefing at the White House.

President Trump said, "I don't think anyone can speak right now. I look very strongly."

He added, "It means that some people think it was an attack, and some people think it is not."

This is a step back from yesterday's (5th) briefing, saying that the explosion was called a ``terrible attack,'' and that some military generals seem to judge it as an attack.

Along with this, President Trump remarked how he would give the Republican presidential nomination speech at the White House, and then replied "lawful" to the controversy over the law.

He insisted that it is legal to use the White House for an acceptance speech, and the White House would be a very convenient place for this speech.

Controversy, however, that President Trump's acceptance speech at the White House would not only transform the White House, a government asset, into the stage of an election campaign, but would also violate laws restricting the political activities of government officials serving on federal budgets. It was fired.