
Today I reaffirmed to President Kim America's unyielding commitment to South Korea's security.
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Today I reaffirmed to President Kim America's unyielding commitment to South Korea's security.

I think I'd like to comment on all that in the—we'll have a press statement.

We have offered as clearly as we could to North Korea the opportunity to reassess our relationships.

With great pleasure, I sign into law this act celebrating the triumph of the human spirit.

I want to thank the bipartisan congressional leadership for their cooperation and for our good working relationship here in this first year.

You and I share a vision, Mr. President, a vision of a Korea at peace and one day reunited on terms acceptable to the Korean people.

We'll have a statement about that later.

North Korea's nuclear program and its continuing military threat pose serious challenges to both South Korea and America.

We are both concerned by North Korea's concentration of forces near the Demilitarized Zone and by its refusal to grant international inspectors full access to its nuclear sites.

I don't know enough about it to give an answer.

The American people want us to act on crime.

This is a breakthrough for political reform and a sign that we have heard the American people.

The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that H.R. 3400, as amended by the Sabo amendment, would yield savings of $37.1 billion over 5 years.

I think that the conditions you see today in a lot of the most desperate areas of our country are the result of a confluence of forces.

I very much admire his own efforts toward economic liberalization.

Families are our Nation's lifeblood and strength.