President Donald Trump has again sided with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, saying on Tuesday that he would not allow the CIA to spy on Pyongyang while he's in power.

Asked about a report that Kim Jong Nam, Kim's exiled half brother, was a CIA informant who was later killed, Trump said he wouldn't allow that to happen under his watch.

Trump has long backed hostile foreign governments over the assessments of his own intelligence services.

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President Donald Trump was asked on Tuesday about a Wall Street Journal report that Kim Jong Nam, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's slain half brother, was a CIA source.

Trump said he had seen the story but that nothing like that would occur under his watch.

"I saw the information about the CIA with respect to his brother or half brother, and I would tell him that would not happen under my auspice that's for sure," Trump told a press gaggle before boarding the presidential helicopter.

"I just received a beautiful letter from Kim Jong Un. I can't show you the letter, obviously, but it was very personal, very warm, very nice letter," Trump told the press. "North Korea, under his leadership, has great potential."

Kim Jong Nam was killed with a nerve agent at an airport in Malaysia in February 2017. North Korea has been accused of orchestrating the killing but has officially denied any involvement.

Two women involved in the assassination told courts they believed they were involved in a prank game show during a long and bizarre trial that played out after Kim Jong Nam's death.

CNN White House correspondent Abby Phillip, who was at the press gaggle, confirmed to Business Insider that Trump was indeed saying he would not allow the US to use informants against North Korea.

Trump has a long history of attacking the CIA and other intelligence agencies. Notably, Trump sided with Russian President Vladimir Putin during a press conference in Helsinki when he took Putin's word that Russia had not meddled in the US elections.

This sent the CIA into "panic mode," according to The Washington Post. Later, Trump retracted that statement, saying he misspoke.

Additionally, Trump has repeatedly accepted promises from Kim Jong Un that the intelligence community warned against. Famously, at their summit in Singapore, Trump took Kim at his word that North Korea would denuclearize.

So far, North Korea has taken no meaningful steps toward dismantling its nuclear weapons and infrastructure but has almost completely stopped the provocative missile and nuclear tests that brought the Washington and Pyongyang on the verge of war in 2017.