After publicly criticising British Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit strategy, US President Donald Trump said on Friday that the relationship was "very, very strong."
"We really have a very good relationship," Trump said.
"Today we are talking trade and we are talking military," Trump said.
When asked by reporters if they had discussed an interview in which Trump criticised May's Brexit strategy, May said:
"We've got a lot to discuss," May said, adding that they would discuss the so-called special relationship between the United States and United Kingdom as well as the real opportunities for a trade deal. 
Earlier, Trump directly criticised May's Brexit strategy, saying it had probably killed off hope of a US-British trade deal and that she had failed to take his advice on how to negotiate with the European Union.

In an interview published just hours before he was due to have lunch with May and tea with Queen Elizabeth on Friday, Trump chided the "very unfortunate" results of the prime minister's Brexit negotiation.
"If they do a deal like that, we would be dealing with the European Union instead of dealing with the UK, so it will probably kill the deal," Trump told the Rupert Murdoch-owned Sun newspaper.
"I would have done it much differently," he told The Sun, which urged its readers to back Brexit before a referendum in June 2016. "I actually told Theresa May how to do it, but she didn't listen to me."
After a tumultuous week for May, when her Brexit Secretary David Davis and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson resigned in protest at the Brexit plan, Trump heaped praise on Johnson, saying he "would be a great prime minister".
Such public criticism by a sitting US president of a British prime minister while on a visit to the United Kingdom publicly undermines May in her party, her country and abroad.
Sterling fell half a percent to a 1-1/2 week low of $1.3131, partly on Trump's comments.
When asked about the comments, May's spokesman said she was looking forward to sitting down with Trump to talk him through the negotiating stance.
As Britain prepares to leave the EU on March 29, 2019, supporters of Brexit have made much of the so-called special relationship with the United States and the benefits of forging closer trade ties with the world's biggest economy.
Many have cast May's plan as a betrayal, including lawmakers in her divided Conservative Party, who have warned that she might face a leadership challenge.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said the president "likes and respects Prime Minister May very much," adding that he said in the interview she "is a very good person” and that he "never said anything bad about her".
Trump protests
For supporters, Trump and Brexit offer the prospect of breaking free from what they see as obsolete institutions and rules.
But for many British diplomats, Brexit marks the collapse of a 70-year strategy of trying to balance European integration with a US alliance based on blood, trade and intelligence sharing.
Trump has frequently angered British politicians. Late last year, May criticised him for retweeting a message by a member of a British far-right group, and the speaker of parliament has said Trump would not be welcome to address the chamber.
More than 64,000 people have signed up to demonstrate in London against Trump's visit. On Friday, protesters inflated a blimp depicting the US president as an orange, snarling baby just outside the British parliament.
"I guess when they put out blimps to make me feel unwelcome, no reason for me to go to London," Trump told the Sun.
One of the organisers of the blimp protest said the aim of the stunt was to make people laugh.
"It’s also about giving a boost to those in America resisting his policies," said Daniel Jones, 26, who wore a red boiler suit and baseball cap emblazoned with "TRUMP BABYSITTER".
On Thursday, May invoked World War Two leader Winston Churchill as she addressed Trump and business leaders at a black-tie dinner at Blenheim Palace, the 18th century country house where Churchill was born.
"Mr. President, Sir Winston Churchill once said that 'to have the United States at our side was, to me, the greatest joy'," May told Trump, according to a text of her speech.
"The spirit of friendship and cooperation between our countries, our leaders and our people, that most special of relationships, has a long and proud history," she said, adding that the United States was "not just the closest of allies but the dearest of friends".
Outside the mansion, northwest of London, a couple of thousand booing demonstrators lined the road. It was one of more than a hundred protests police expected during Trump's four-day trip.
"I think it’s a travesty of British values. How can we roll out the red carpet for someone who stands for everything we stand against?" said academic Emily Jones, 40, one of those protesting outside Blenheim Palace.
While Trump's trip was not the full state visit he was originally promised, he was heralded by military bands on his arrival in the country and at Blenheim, and he is scheduled to take the tea with Queen Elizabeth. 
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