President Barack Obama said Sunday that he doesn’t take seriously North Korea’s claim that it would halt nuclear tests if the U.S. suspends military exercises with South Korea.
North Korea’s Foreign Minister Ri Su Yong made the ultimatum in an exclusive interview with The Associated Press Saturday hours after North Korea test-fired a ballistic missile from a submarine.
“We don’t take seriously a promise to halt” nuclear tests, Obama said during a joint press conference in Hanover with German chancellor Angela Merkel.
He said the U.S. would engage in “serious conversations” with North Korea if the country shows that it is serious about ending its nuclear program.
“What is clear is that North Korea continues to engage in continuous provocative behavior, that they have been actively pursuing a nuclear program, an ability to launch nuclear weapons,” Obama said. “And although more often than not they fail in many of these tests, they gain knowledge each time they engage in these tests.”
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Obama is in Germany on two-day push to sell his trans-Atlantic trade pact, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). He said Sunday the U.S. and European Union need to “keep moving forward” on negotiations for a U.S.-Europe trade deal. He said Merkel agrees with him.
“What you’re seeing around the world is people are unsettled by globalization,” Obama said. But “trade has brought enormous benefits,” he said, adding that America has to stay competitive as regions in Asia and Africa begin to develop their economies.









