Connect with us

America

Donald Trump again leaves open door to third-party bid

Image
Image

Washington, April 2 

US presidential candidate and Republican front-runner Donald Trump has again declined to rule out launching an independent bid for the White House.

"I want to run as a Republican. I will beat Hillary Clinton," he told Fox News' Chris Wallace in an interview set to air Sunday morning on "Fox News Sunday". Excerpts of the interview were released on Friday night.

But when pressed to definitively say he would not consider it, Trump added, "I'm going to have to see how I was treated. It's very simple."

Trump has waffled throughout the campaign about whether he would actually run a third-party campaign should he be denied the Republican nomination or, as he puts it, be treated "unfairly" by the Republican National Committee, CNN reported. 

In September 2015, he signed a pledge to support the eventual Republican nominee for president -- whoever that may be -- but backed off that promise at a CNN town hall event on Tuesday. 

Trump's two remaining challengers, Texas Senator Ted Cruz and Ohio Governor John Kasich, also distanced themselves from that promise.

Though he led national polls soon after he announced his bid and has won a majority of the contests so far, it is unknown if Trump will reach the 1,237 delegates needed to clinch the nomination. 

Trump doesn't know much about foreign policy: Obama

 US President Barack Obama said Donald Trump's suggestion that Japan and South Korea should consider obtaining nuclear weapons demonstrates the Republican presidential front-runner's lack of understanding about foreign policy.

"The person who made the statements doesn't know much about foreign policy or nuclear policy or the Korean Peninsula or the world generally," Obama said at a news conference on Friday during the closing of the two-day Nuclear Security Summit, here.

Obama described the US nuclear umbrella for Japan and South Korea, in place of their own arsenals, as "one of the cornerstones of our presence in the Asia Pacific," which has provided the US peace, prosperity and flowing commerce, CNN reported.

"It has prevented the possibilities of a nuclear escalation and conflict," he said, adding "You don't mess with that. It's an investment that rests on the sacrifices that our men and women made" in the Second World War.

"We don't want someone in the Oval Office who doesn't recognize how important that is," Obama added.

The summit came as the Republican front-runner to replace Obama in the White House made several controversial nuclear proposals this week.

Trump said that nuclear proliferation is the world's biggest challenge, but also suggested at a CNN town hall on Tuesday that it may be time for Japan and South Korea to develop their own nuclear arsenals so the US can pull back from Asia.

Trump has also suggested re-drawing US security relationships in other regions, arguing that Germany and Saudi Arabia need to do more in their own defence or pay the US more for the protection it offers.

The summit, the final of four Obama has held during his presidency since 2010, drew over 50 leaders from around the world to discuss ways to prevent the use of nuclear weapons and better secure nuclear materials, especially from the threat of nuclear terrorism.

Obama said global efforts to improve nuclear security have removed from circulation material that is equivalent to 150 nuclear weapons, safeguarding it from extremists.

At the opening of the nuclear conference's Friday session, Obama said the summit's work -- mostly done quietly behind the scenes in the months between high profile gatherings -- served the crucial purpose of reducing the chances that nuclear materials could be stolen.