Santa Fe New Mexican

Kim sets big condition for U.S., then heads to volcano with Moon

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PYONGYANG, North Korea — The two Korean leaders took to the road for the final day of their summit Thursday, heading to a beautiful volcano considered sacred in the North and used in its propaganda to legitimize the Kims’ three generation­s of rule. Their trip followed a day of wide-ranging agreements they trumpeted as a major step toward peace on the Korean Peninsula.

However, their premier accord on the issue most fascinatin­g and worrisome — the North’s pursuit of nucleartip­ped missiles that can accurately strike the U.S. mainland — contained a big condition: Kim Jong Un stated he would permanentl­y dismantle North Korea’s main nuclear complex only if the United States takes unspecifie­d correspond­ing measures.

As they headed to the volcano, Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in were basking in the glow of the joint statement they settled Wednesday. Compared to the vague language of their two earlier summits, Kim and Moon seem to have agreed on an ambitious program meant to tackle soaring tensions last year that had many fearing war as the North tested a string of increasing­ly powerful weapons.

Kim promised to accept internatio­nal inspectors to monitor the closing of a key missile test site and launch pad and to visit Seoul soon, and both leaders vowed to work together to try to host the Summer Olympics in 2032.

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