President Trump Donald John TrumpBiden on Trump's refusal to commit to peaceful transfer of power: 'What country are we in?' Romney: 'Unthinkable and unacceptable' to not commit to peaceful transition of power Two Louisville police officers shot amid Breonna Taylor grand jury protests MORE on Wednesday cast doubt on reports that North Korea carried out a bloody purge of officials who organized his failed nuclear summit with the country's leader, Kim Jong Un Kim Jong UnSatellite images indicate North Korea preparing for massive military parade South Korea warns of underwater missile test launch by North Korea Trump says he didn't share classified information following Woodward book MORE.

Trump pointed to news reports that senior North Korean official Kim Yong Chol, who was reportedly sentenced to hard labor, recently reappeared at a theater performance seated close to Kim Jong Un.

“They like to blame Kim Jong Un immediately,” Trump said. “But they said he was killed, and he wasn’t, he was at the theater the other night. So he wasn’t killed. The other four people I know nothing about.”

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The president incorrectly stated that Kim Yong Chol had reportedly been executed, apparently mistaking him for Kim Hyok Chol, Pyongyang’s special envoy to the U.S., who had been the subject of those reports saying he was executed along with four other North Korean foreign ministry officials involved in the president's Hanoi, Vietnam, summit with Kim.

Kim Hyok Chol is in custody, according to a report by CNN citing several sources familiar with the situation.

“I don't know if the reports are correct,” Trump said when asked about the purge during a meeting in Ireland with Prime Minister Leo Varadkar. “One of the people they were talking about that was supposedly executed was not executed at all.”

The president expressed confidence that he could eventually broker a nuclear agreement with Kim Jong Un, despite the growing skepticism of some officials within his own administration and lawmakers following the collapse of the Hanoi summit.

“I think Chairman Kim would like to make a deal and I’d like to make a deal with him,” Trump said.

The president said he believes his efforts to reach a deal are “going pretty well” even though there have been no further high-level talks and North Korea recently tested a short-range missile.

“There hasn’t been testing of anything major and frankly, there has been no nuclear testing for a long period of time,” Trump said, again brushing aside the missile test, which national security adviser John Bolton John BoltonMaximum pressure is keeping US troops in Iraq and Syria Woodward book trails Bolton, Mary Trump in first-week sales Ex-NSC official alleges 'unprecedented' intervention by White House aides in Bolton book review MORE and U.S. allies have said violated a United Nations Security Council resolution.

There have been conflicting reports about a North Korean purge, underscoring how little the U.S. and its allies know about the inner workings of the hermit country.

A South Korean newspaper reported late last week that Kim Yong Chol had been banished and sentence to hard labor, just days before his reappearance. That is in addition to CNN's latest report stating that the South Korean newspaper’s report of Kim Hyok Chol's execution by firing squad was untrue.

-Updated 2:20 p.m.