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Trump received another letter from Kim, which Sanders described as "very warm" and "very positive" on Monday, noting that the White House will not release the letter unless Kim agrees.
The primary intention of the letter, she said at Monday's briefing, was to "request and schedule another meeting" between the two leaders, which the White House is "open to".
She said the White House "is already coordinating" another meeting, but declined to provide more details about a time or place.
She cited the letter as "further evidence of progress" towards denuclearization, noting that the last parade did not concern "their nuclear arsenal".
The letter, she said, shows a "commitment to continue conversations".
"President Trump has tried to keep the door open to Kim Jong Un and his regime if they want to denuclearize," Bolton said, adding that "President Trump can not get North Koreans out. take steps to denuclearize and that's what we expect. "
According to Bolton, Kim said in April to South Korean President Moon Jae-in that he could denuclearize North Korea "in a year". Bolton also noted Monday that he "thought he could do it even faster."
Last week, Bolton met with his South Korean counterpart, the director of the National Security Bureau, Chung Eui-yong, and received a "full report on Ambassador Chung's visit to Pyongyang on September 5 ".
South Korean officials also said last week that Kim had "an unshakeable faith in President Trump" and wanted to achieve the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula before the US leader ends his term.
During the weekend, North Korea celebrated Sunday's national day with a series of performances glorifying the 70-year reign of the Kim Dynasty, but it has rebuffed any mention of its nuclear weapons program. United States.