The Day

Kim agrees to dismantle main nuke site if U.S. takes steps

Ambitious Korean program aimed at tackling soaring tensions

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Pyongyang, North Korea — The leaders of North and South Korea announced a wide range of agreements Wednesday which they said were a major step toward peace on the Korean Peninsula. But the premier pledge on denucleari­zation contained a big condition, with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un stating he’d permanentl­y dismantle his main nuclear complex only if the United States takes unspecifie­d correspond­ing measures.

Compared to the vague language of their two summits earlier this year, Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in agreed in their second day of meetings to 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.

But while containing several tantalizin­g offers, their joint statement appeared to fall short of the major steps many in Washington have been looking for — such as a commitment by Kim to provide a list of North Korea’s nuclear facilities, a solid step-by-step timeline for closing them down, or an agreement to allow internatio­nal inspectors to assess progress or discover violations.

It also was unclear what “correspond­ing steps” North Korea wants from the U.S. to dismantle its nuclear site.

The question is whether it will be enough for U.S. President Donald Trump to pick up where Moon has left off. Trump told reporters that the outcome of the summit was “very good news” and that “we’re making tremendous progress” with North Korea.

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