



The American president had already taken some steps to alienate South Korea, a longtime U.S. ally. When Trump lied about dispatching an “armada,” led by an aircraft carrier, towards the peninsula, South Koreans



Late last week, Trump made matters vastly worse,



“On the THAAD system, it’s about a billion dollars,” Trump



The president’s National Security Advisor, Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, soon after told his South Korean counterpart the opposite. The Wall Street Journal While the United States deals with the possibility of a crisis with North Korea, Donald Trump decided last week would be a good time to pick a fight with, of all countries, South Korea.The American president had already taken some steps to alienate South Korea, a longtime U.S. ally. When Trump lied about dispatching an “armada,” led by an aircraft carrier, towards the peninsula, South Koreans weren’t pleased . When Trump falsely said Korean Peninsula “used to be a part of China,” that didn’t go over especially well , either.Late last week, Trump made matters vastly worse, condemning the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement, known as Korus, and threatening to trash the deal. He then said he wants to deploy a missile-defense system – Terminal High-Altitude Air Defense (Thaad) – in South Korea to help protect against a North Korean attack, but only if South Korea pays for the technology.“On the THAAD system, it’s about a billion dollars,” Trump told Reuters. “I said, ‘Why are we paying? Why are we paying a billion dollars? We’re protecting. Why are we paying a billion dollars?’ So I informed South Korea it would be appropriate if they paid.” Trump made similar comments in a Washington Times interview, adding, “We’re going to protect them. But they should pay for that.”The president’s National Security Advisor, Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, soon after told his South Korean counterpart the opposite. The Wall Street Journal reported

In a 35-minute phone call Sunday morning, Gen. McMaster told Kim Kwan-jin, South Korea’s national-security adviser, that the U.S. would finance Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense, or Thaad, as agreed to by the two countries last year, according to a statement from South Korea’s presidential Blue House.



During the phone call, Gen. McMaster also praised the U.S. alliance with South Korea as “the most solid alliance” and as Washington’s priority in the region, saying that “the U.S. will be with the Republic of Korea 100%,” using the formal name for South Korea.