President Donald Trump says he and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un “fell in love” over letters he and the brutal dictator have exchanged in recent months. Really.

Trump made the remarks while speaking at a Make America Great Again rally in Wheeling, West Virginia, on Saturday. At first, the audience laughed when he said it, but then he reiterated the point — and acknowledged it would probably raise some eyebrows. Here’s what Trump said:

I was really being tough, and so was he. And we would go back and forth. And then we fell in love, okay? No, really. He wrote me beautiful letters, and they’re great letters. We fell in love.

He then gestured, presumably to the press or world outside the arena, and anticipated a reaction. “But you know what? Now they’ll make, they’ll say, ‘Donald Trump said they fell in love, how horrible. How horrible is that? So unpresidential,’” he said.

Trump on Kim Jong-un: "We fell in love. Ok? No really. He wrote me beautiful letters." pic.twitter.com/fscz1sWYS6 — Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) September 30, 2018

Trump was correct that the remarks would cause some ripples. Kim has made headlines in the last several years for his rapid development of the country’s nuclear arsenal, but first and foremost, he is a brutal and murderous dictator with a history of human rights abuses. Vox’s Li Zhou points out that, according to a 2017 International Bar Association report, there has been evidence of ”systematic murder (including infanticide), torture, persecution of Christians, rape, forced abortions, starvation and overwork leading to countless deaths,” and other crimes against humanity. That same report said that the Kim regime has “designed and perpetuated a brutal, totalitarian regime, a signature feature of which is a network of political prisons that has no parallel in the world today.”

Trump and Kim met at a summit in Singapore in June to discuss relations and the country’s potential denuclearization. Trump took a victory lap immediately thereafter, declaring that North Korea is no longer a threat, though there’s evidence that’s not the case and that the country is not, in fact, ending nuclear activities.

Trump has lavished praise on Kim at times, and the pair have exchanged letters, parts of which have been highly complimentary to one another. The Trump administration is preparing for a second North Korea summit, but the time and place haven’t yet been set. Trump canceled Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s trip to North Korea in August, saying there wasn’t “sufficient evidence” of Pyongyang’s denuclearization efforts.

Trump loves to talk about strongmen

In an interview with Fox & Friends in June, Trump said he admires how Kim’s people treat him. “I want my people to do the same,” he said, without acknowledging that the North Korean public is forced to admire Kim. He also toyed with the idea of inviting Kim to the White House.

Trump says he wants people to treat him like North Koreans treat Kim Jung Un.



Really. pic.twitter.com/C0K7awpMIV — Judd Legum (@JuddLegum) June 15, 2018

More broadly, Trump has a history of speaking kindly about dictators and strongmen. He joked about Chinese President Xi Jinping changing the country’s constitution so that he could be “president for life” and quipped that “maybe we’ll have to give that a shot someday.”

He’s also praised Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, who imposes capital punishment on drug dealers, and said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan gets “very high marks.” Trump’s deference to Russian President Vladimir Putin is well documented.

Trump’s Saturday remarks about Kim indicate that he’s well aware of the blowback those comments are likely to ignite — and he made them anyway. The leader of one of the most powerful democracies in the world publicly admiring multiple brutal dictators, even if sometimes his comments seem to be made in jest, is disturbing.

It is also reflective of Trump’s transactional personality: He says nice things about me, I say nice things about him. Kim’s letters to Trump are a love story, no matter Kim’s actions in North Korea or the global risks his compliments might gloss over.