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by Staff Writers Washington (AFP) April 26, 2018
US President Donald Trump said Thursday that three or four possible dates were being considered for his landmark summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The American leader has previously mentioned late May or early June for the highly anticipated meeting, within weeks of Friday's historic inter-Korean summit. "We have a decision to be made. We have three or four dates. That includes five locations. That will be narrowed down," Trump said on Fox News. The tension-racked peninsula has seen a dramatic diplomatic detente, with the nuclear-armed North last week announcing a moratorium on nuclear tests and long-range missile launches. Asked about his expectations for the meeting with the man he has called "Rocket Man," the American president was unclear. "Could be I walk out quickly with respect or could be maybe even the meeting won't take place, who knows?" Trump said. "But I can tell you right now they want to meet." The president said his administration's diplomatic gains defied expectations of conflict with North Korea. "I can only say this: When I came into office, people thought we were going into nuclear war, okay? And now they're saying, 'Wow, looks like this will be taken care of,'" he said. Trump noted that during his recent, secret, visit to North Korea, CIA chief Mike Pompeo was not initially scheduled to meet with Kim. "We have incredible pictures of the two talking and meeting, which I would love to release if we can," Trump said. "It was more than hello. They got along. They were with each other more than an hour. They spoke. He also spoke with his counterparts in North Korea. They had a great meeting." Pompeo faced a Senate confirmation vote later on Thursday to replaced Rex Tillerson, who was sacked as secretary of state.
North Korea nuclear test site part-collapsed: Chinese experts Beijing (AFP) April 25, 2018 North Korea's underground nuclear test site has partially collapsed following a massive bomb blast last year, making it unusable, Chinese seismologists have concluded. The North's leader Kim Jong Un declared last week that his regime would halt nuclear and long-range missile tests and shut down its nuclear site at Punggye-ri under Mount Mantap in the country's northeast. The offer came days before his summit this Friday with the South's President Moon Jae-in, which is scheduled to be followed by ... read more
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