US President Donald Trump stated Friday that North Korea’s recent missile tests were not a “breach of trust.”

“They’re short-range and I don’t consider that a breach of trust at all. And, you know, at some point I may. But at this point no,” he asserted in an interview with Politico.

“These were short-range missiles and very standard stuff. Very standard.”

Pyongyang fired two short-range missiles Thursday following an previous exercise on Saturday. The North have not launched any since November 2017, soon before leader Kim Jong Un embarked on diplomatic overtures.

Trump, who has declared that he and Kim have a solid relationship, inserted that he might at some point lose faith in the North Korean leader.

“I mean it’s possible that at some point I will, but right now not at all,” he stated.

Kim confirmed an end to the testing of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles in the course of a steady rapprochement last year, paving the path for his first summit with Trump in Singapore in June.

But the next summit between the 2 mercurial leaders in Hanoi in February decided to break up without a deal once they failed to accept on what Pyongyang might be wanting to sacrifice in exchange for sanctions relief.

Since that time Kim have accused Washington of acting in “bad faith,” and provided it until the end of the year to modify the approach.