New Straits Times

N. KOREA NUKE TEST SITE TO BE BLOWN UP THIS MONTH

Pyongyang to invite foreign media to witness event from May 23 to 25

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NORTH Korea will destroy its nuclear test site later this month, ahead of a summit with the United States, it said on Saturday, pledging to blow up its tunnels in front of invited foreign media.

US President Donald Trump praised the North’s decision to dismantle the Punggye-ri test site in a ceremony scheduled between May 23 and 25, the latest step in leader Kim Jong Un’s charm offensive.

“Thank you, a very smart and gracious gesture!” Trump tweeted.

Dialogue brokered by Seoul has seen US-North Korea relations go from trading personal insults and threats of war last year to a summit between Kim and Trump due in Singapore on June 12.

But sceptics warn that Pyongyang has yet to make any public commitment to give up its arsenal, which includes missiles capable of reaching the United States.

Punggye-ri, in the northeast of the country, has hosted all six of the North’s nuclear tests, the latest and by far the most powerful in September last year, which Pyongyang said was an Hbomb.

Kim has declared the developmen­t of the North’s nuclear force complete and that it had no further need for the site.

The latest measures will see the tunnels of the test site blown up and their entrances completely blocked, Pyongyang’s foreign ministry said.

All observatio­n facilities and research institutes would be removed, along with guards, it said, “and the surroundin­g area of the test ground be completely closed”.

Reporters from China, Russia, the United States, Britain and South Korea would be allowed to cover the event on site to show it “in a transparen­t manner”.

South Korea welcomed the announceme­nt, which signalled the North’s willingnes­s to carry out its pledges “not just in words but in action”.

“We hope the sound of the dynamite blowing up the tunnels at Punggye-ri will be the first salute in our journey towards a nuclearfre­e Korean peninsula,” the South’s presidenti­al spokesman said.

Analysts said the move was positive but limited in its scope.

It was “not bad, but a cost-free signal”, tweeted MIT political science professor Vipin Narang.

Given the stage it had already reached, Pyongyang “may feel like they don’t need to test anything for a while”, he said.

Jeffrey Lewis, of the Middlebury Institute for Internatio­nal Studies, expected that the North “will sanitise the site before letting anyone see it”.

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