Los Angeles Times

North Korea offers to close missile site

Kim agrees to shutter a nuclear missile site. Washington proposes high-level talks.

- By Robyn Dixon robyn.dixon@latimes.com Twitter: @RobynDixon_LAT

The U.S. applauds the move, bolstering hopes for another denucleari­zation summit between Kim Jong Un and President Trump.

BEIJING — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un offered Wednesday to shut down a nuclear missile testing and launch site in a developmen­t welcomed by President Trump, raising hopes of a second meeting between the two leaders in the quest for a long-sought Korean peninsula denucleari­zation deal.

Kim made the offer to close down the Tongchangr­i missile testing center and launchpad at a summit in Pyongyang with South Korean President Moon Jae-in. The two signed an agreement to “eliminate all danger” of war on the Korean peninsula, recommitti­ng to the denucleari­zation of the peninsula.

Kim also agreed to close down the Yongbyon nuclear facility, the first time such an offer has been made by North Korea — but only if the U.S. offers reciprocal rewards. Washington expects North Korea to dismantle its nuclear facilities — in a verifiable manner — before concession­s are made.

Kim agreed that internatio­nal experts would be present to observe the dismantlin­g of the Tongchang-ri facilities.

Although some experts suggested Kim was giving up facilities no longer important to him, given North Korea’s developmen­t of nuclear missiles, Trump’s instantane­ous positive reaction on Twitter kept the door open to a possible new summit with Kim.

Kim last week requested a second summit, after the historic meeting in Singapore in June, the first between U.S. and North Korean leaders. U.S. officials last week said preparatio­ns were underway for a second meeting.

A second summit may hinge on a meeting between Trump and Moon expected next week, at which Moon is to brief Trump on his summit with Kim.

Calling the developmen­ts “very exciting,” Trump tweeted Wednesday that “Kim Jong Un has agreed to allow Nuclear inspection­s, subject to final negotiatio­ns, and to permanentl­y dismantle a test site and launch pad in the presence of internatio­nal experts. In the meantime there will be no Rocket or Nuclear testing.” He added that the remains of U.S. servicemen killed in the Korean War would continue to be returned to the U.S.

U.S.-North Korea denucleari­zation talks stalled in recent months. Trump last month canceled a visit by Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo to North Korea for talks, citing lack of progress.

On Wednesday, Pompeo congratula­ted Kim and Moon in a statement for “the successful outcome of their summit meeting in Pyongyang.”

“We welcome President Moon and Chairman Kim’s reaffirmat­ion of the Singapore joint statement of complete denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula, including the permanent dismantlem­ent of all facilities at Yongbyon,” he said. “On the basis of these important commitment­s, the United States is prepared to engage immediatel­y in negotiatio­ns to transform U.S.-DPRK relations.”

Pompeo said he invited his North Korean counterpar­t, Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho, to meet him next week in New York during the U.N. General Assembly meeting.

The leaders of the two Koreas appeared to move significan­tly closer at Wednesday’s meeting: Kim accepted Moon’s invitation to visit Seoul in the near future, in what would be the first visit to the country by a North Korean leader. The two countries also decided to make a joint bid to host the 2032 Olympic Games.

They also signed a 55page military deal designed to ease tension on the border, including creating a border buffer zone, removing land mines from the demilitari­zed zone, creating a nofly zone along the DMZ and closing 11 guard posts.

Kim gave Moon a welcome that was full of photo opportunit­ies and symbolic moments. He met Moon at the airport Tuesday and hugged him on the tarmac before the two drove through the streets of Pyongyang in an opentopped limousine as flagwaving crowds cheered.

The summit saw Moon eating North Korea’s most iconic dish, a meal of cold handmade buckwheat noodles called naengmyeon ,at lunch Wednesday, with Kim later joking that he was concerned Moon had to hurry the meal because of the summit agenda.

“You have to slow down when you eat buckwheat noodles,” Kim said, showing a softer side in contrast to his global image as a reclusive, ruthless and sometimes eccentric figure.

In another deeply symbolic move, Kim invited Moon to accompany him Thursday on a visit to Mt. Paektu, a volcano on the border with China that has great historical and cultural significan­ce for North Korea and South Korea.

Standing side by side at a news conference after their talks Wednesday, Moon and Kim extolled their agreement as an important breakthrou­gh for peace.

Kim called it a historic agreement that ended decades of hostility between the Koreas.

“We will be ushering in a new era of peace at a faster pace,” Kim said. “We have agreed to make the Korean peninsula a land of peace that is free from nuclear weapons and nuclear threat.

“The road to our future will not always be smooth and we may face challenges and trials we can’t anticipate. But we aren’t afraid of head winds because our strength will grow as we overcome each trial based on the strength of our nation.”

Moon said Kim had shown he was committed to full denucleari­zation.

“I would like to offer my deepest gratitude to him for his courageous determinat­ion,” Moon said. He said progress on improved relations between the Koreas had not slowed in the months since he and Kim met in April and May.

“It looks as if it is going too fast; however, it is not, because we have been preparing for this for a very long time and it is just unfolding before our eyes,” he said.

Kim said the two Koreas would make their way to peace, with no fears about external forces.

Trump recently tweeted that he and Kim would “both prove everyone wrong! There is nothing like good dialogue from two people that like each other!” That tweet on Sept. 9 came after a military parade in North Korea commemorat­ing the 70th anniversar­y of the country’s founding that did not include the usual display of interconti­nental ballistic missiles, considered a sign of restraint by Kim.

Trump’s national security advisor, John Bolton, said a day later that the U.S. was waiting for North Korea to denucleari­ze but could not make the country do so.

“They’re the ones that have to take the steps to denucleari­ze, and that’s what we’re waiting for,” he said in a speech. U.S. officials want concrete details on North Korea’s nuclear arms, with a verifiable list of nuclear facilities and transparen­cy on steps to dismantle them.

Kim fell short of that requiremen­t Wednesday. Any future summit between Trump and Kim would have to make progress on that sticking point in order to break the long deadlock over North Korea’s nuclear weapons.

 ?? Pool Photo ?? AT THEIR MEETING in Pyongyang, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, right, accepted South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s invitation to visit Seoul.
Pool Photo AT THEIR MEETING in Pyongyang, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, right, accepted South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s invitation to visit Seoul.

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