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Trump praises North Korea’s Kim for progress in nuclear talks

- BLOOMBERG

US President Donald Trump praised North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un for agreeing to further steps toward giving up his nuclear weapons, signaling that stalled negotiatio­ns might get back on track despite the lack of concrete details.

In a late-night tweet, Trump described Kim’s moves to discuss allowing nuclear inspectors, in addition to dismantlin­g a missile test site and putting in a joint bid to host the 2032 Summer Olympics with South Korea, as “Very exciting!” Last month, Trump cancelled a visit to Pyongyang by Secretary of State Michael Pompeo due to a lack of progress after his landmark summit with Kim in June.

During a second day of meetings between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, North Korea on Wednesday agreed to dismantle its main Yongbyon nuclear production site if the US takes reciprocal actions. It also said it would dismantle a key missile test site under the watch of internatio­nal inspectors and take other steps toward denucleari­sation.

“We agreed to make active efforts to turn the Korean peninsula into the land of peace without nuclear weapons or nuclear threats,” Kim said at a joint briefing with Moon in Pyongyang.

Moon, who invited Kim to visit Seoul later this year, added: “Chairman Kim has clearly shown a way to denucleari­se the Korean peninsula today (Wednesday). We have agreed on a Korean Peninsula without nuclear weapons, without nuclear threats and without a war.”

Even as the summit appeared to open the door for renewed US-North Korea talks, little progress was evident on the major issues dividing the two sides. Kim is pushing for a peace declaratio­n with the US before he takes concrete steps toward getting rid of his nuclear capability, while the Trump administra­tion wants a detailed inventory of his weapons and inspection­s.

It’s still unclear if North Korea will unveil nuclear production facilities other than Yongbyon, and disclose the location of its mobile launchers that can fire interconti­nental ballistic missiles.

“There are a number of positive steps that increase trust in Korea,” said Melissa Hanham, a senior research associate at the James Martin Center for Nonprolife­ration Studies in Monterey, California. “With regards to denucleari­sation, I don’t think there’s been much change.”

“We agreed to make active efforts to turn the Korean peninsula into the land of peace without nuclear weapons or nuclear threats” KIM JONG-UN North Korean leader

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