Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump Donald John TrumpREAD: Cohen testimony alleges Trump knew Stone talked with WikiLeaks about DNC emails Trump urges North Korea to denuclearize ahead of summit Venezuela's Maduro says he fears 'bad' people around Trump MORE defended his foreign policy views following Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton Hillary Diane Rodham ClintonREAD: Cohen testimony alleges Trump knew Stone talked with WikiLeaks about DNC emails County GOP in Minnesota shares image comparing Sanders to Hitler Holder: 'Time to make the Electoral College a vestige of the past' MORE’s speech attacking him this week.

ADVERTISEMENT

"It was supposed to be foreign policy, and it was really Trump policy," Trump said of her speech in an interview with CBS News's “Face the Nation” set to air on Sunday. "And she got it all wrong."

Clinton hit him particularly hard for saying he'd be open to South Korea and Japan getting nuclear weapons so they could play a bigger role in their own defense if they weren't willing to pay the U.S. more for protection.

"I didn't say get nuclear," Trump said on CBS. "Maybe they will, maybe they won't. But at a certain point, you know Japan will, if they're not going to pay us what it's going to cost. ... The fact is, they are paying a small fraction of what it's costing. So is Germany; so is Saudi Arabia; so is South Korea. We are losing a fortune. We're the policemen for the world."