San Francisco Chronicle

North and South Korea vow to seek nuclear-free peninsula.

- By Foster Klug and Kim Tong-Hyung Foster Klug and Kim Tong-Hyung are Associated Press writers.

GOYANG, South Korea — North Korea’s state media on Saturday trumpeted leader Kim Jong Un’s “immortal achievemen­t” a day after he met South Korean President Moon Jae-in and repeated past vows to remove nuclear weapons from the peninsula and work toward a formal end to the Korean War. Despite the bold declaratio­ns, the leaders failed to provide any new measures on a nuclear standoff that has captivated and terrified millions, and analysts expressed doubts on whether the summit represente­d a real breakthrou­gh.

The North’s official Korean Central News Agency, in typically fawning language, reported that the leaders exchanged “honest and heartfelt talks” at a summit that “was a realizatio­n of the supreme leader’s blazing love for the nation and unyielding will for self-reliance.” The state propaganda arm said Kim’s “immortal achievemen­t will be brightly engraved in the history of the Korean nation’s unificatio­n.”

Even if the substance on nuclear matters was light, the images Friday at Panmunjom were striking: Kim and Moon set aside a year that saw them seemingly on the verge of war, grasped hands and strode together across the cracked concrete slab that marks the Koreas’ border.

The sight, inconceiva­ble just months ago, allowed the leaders to step forward toward the possibilit­y of a cooperativ­e future even as they acknowledg­ed a fraught past and the widespread skepticism that, after decades of failed diplomacy, things will be any different this time.

On the nuclear issue, the leaders merely repeated a previous vow to rid their peninsula of nuclear weapons, saying they will achieve a “nuclear-free Korean Peninsula through complete denucleari­zation.” This kicks one of the world’s most pressing issues down the road to a much-anticipate­d summit between Kim and President Trump in coming weeks.

“There is no reference to verificati­on, timetables, or an attempt to define the word ‘complete.’ It does not reiterate or advance Pyongyang’s unilateral offer to halt nuclear and ICBM tests,” said Adam Mount, a senior defense analyst at the Federation of American Scientists. “In practice, this statement should enable a U.S.-North Korea summit to detail specifics about what, when, and how denucleari­zation would occur, but it has not offered a head start on that process. All of the negotiatio­n is left to a U.S. team that is understaff­ed and has little time to prepare.”

Still, the summit produced the spectacle of two men from nations with a deep and bitter history of acrimony grinning from ear to ear after Kim walked over the border to greet Moon, becoming the first leader of his nation to set foot on southern soil since the Korean War. Both leaders then briefly stepped together into the North and back to the South.

The summit marks a surreal, whiplash swing in relations for the countries, from nuclear threats and missile tests to intimation­s of peace and cooperatio­n.

 ?? Pool / Getty Images ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (right) and South Korean President Moon Jae-in talk in private during their meeting in Panmunjom, South Korea.
Pool / Getty Images North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (right) and South Korean President Moon Jae-in talk in private during their meeting in Panmunjom, South Korea.

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