Trump added that the Turkish currency Lira "slides rapidly downward against our very strong Dollar!"
Trump's decision to fire Linick is coming under bipartisan scrutiny. "The firings of multiple Inspectors General is unprecedented," tweeted Senator Mitt Romney, a Utah Republican, and 2012 Republican presidential nominee. "Doing so without good cause chills the independence essential to their purpose."
Treaty would provide protection for both countries' investment
Trump is under pressure to end the shutdown with Americans increasingly blaming him for refusing to sign spending bills that would provide paychecks for 800,000 federal workers who have been idled or working without pay for nearly a month, the longest government shutdown in US history.
Trump also told a press conference in Singapore that he would stop US joint annual military exercises with South Korea, which he called "provocative" and "expensive."
Trump administration initiated an investigation on whether steel imports threaten to impair national security on April 20, by invoking a rarely used section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. President Donald Trump claimed that "both the United States and global markets for steel products are distorted by large volumes of excess capacity -- much of which results from foreign government subsidies and other unfair practices."
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Tsukuba, a rural area 50 km northeast of Tokyo, was selected in 1963 as the site for Japan's first science city to host those institutes.
Trump tweeted earlier on Thursday that the highly anticipated meeting between Kim Jong-un and himself will take place in Singapore on June 12, and said," We will both try to make it a very special moment for World Peace!"
Trump made his comments after a meeting in the Oval Office with Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and acting Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Ned Sharpless.
Trump is "fueling the economy with fiscal stimulus and then asking that you don't tighten interest rates, but the Fed is normalizing monetary policy, not really tightening - it's accompanying the recovery and lifting rates up to the point where they are neutral," Laurence Boone, the chief economist of the OECD, said on the sidelines of the conference.