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Images indicate N.Korea dismantlin­g test site facilities - report

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - Satellite images indicate North Korea has begun dismantlin­g key facilities at a site used to develop engines for ballistic missiles, in a first step toward fulfilling a pledge made to U.S. President Donald Trump at a June summit, a Washington-based think tank said yesterday.

The July 20 images showed work at the Sohae Satellite Launching Station to dismantle a building used to assemble space-launch vehicles and a nearby rocket engine test stand used to develop liquid-fuel engines for ballistic missiles and spacelaunc­h vehicles, the 38 North think tank said.

“Since these facilities are believed to have played an important role in the developmen­t of technologi­es for the North’s interconti­nental ballistic missile program, these efforts represent a significan­t confidence-building measure on the part of North Korea,” it said in a report.

Trump told a news conference after his unpreceden­ted June 12 summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that Kim had promised that a major missile engine testing site would be destroyed very soon.

Trump did not identify the site, but a U.S. official subsequent­ly told Reuters that it was Sohae.

The 38 North report comes amid growing questions about North Korea’s willingnes­s to live up to the commitment­s Kim made at the summit, particular­ly to work towards denucleari­zation.

U.S. officials have repeatedly said North Korea has committed to giving up a nuclear weapons program that now threatens the United States, but Pyongyang has offered no details as to how it might go about this.

Jenny Town, managing editor of 38 North, which is based at Washington’s Stimson Center, said the work at Sohae could be an important move to keep negotiatio­ns going.

“This could (and that’s a big could) mean that North Korea is also willing to forgo satellite launches for the time being as well as nuclear and missile tests. This distinctio­n has derailed diplomacy in the past,” she said.

On Friday, senior U.S. officials called on Kim to act on his promise to give up his nuclear weapons and said the world, including China and Russia, must continued to enforce sanctions on Pyongyang until he does so.

Yesterday, the U.S. State Department issued an advisory together with the department­s of Treasury and Homeland Security alerting businesses to North Korea’s sanctions-evasion tactics.

It said they should “implement effective due diligence policies, procedures, and internal controls to ensure compliance with applicable legal requiremen­ts across their entire supply chains.”

In a tweet early yesterday, Trump rejected “Fake News” that he was angry because progress was not happening fast enough with North Korea.

“Wrong, very happy!” he said in the Tweet.

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Kim Jong Un

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