Let's start at the G20 Summit in Argentina.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in and U.S. President Donald Trump have held talks on
the sidelines of the summit.
North Korea dominated most of their discussion.
Shin Se-min has our top story.
The leaders of South Korea and the United States in tune on North Korea.
Presidents Moon Jae-in and Donald Trump sat down on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in
Argentina on Friday for a frank discussion with just their translators in attendance.
They vowed to align their policies to ensure the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula
remains on track.
"President Trump, while affirming his commitment to hold a second North Korea-U.S. summit early
next year,... asked that South Korea and the U.S. maintain close cooperation so the summit
will be another historic milestone in the process of denuclearizing North Korea."
President Moon's chief press secretary explained that President Trump reaffirmed his pledge
to hold a second summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un,... and noted that Kim's
planned reciprocal visit to Seoul may create new momentum in efforts to denuclearize Pyeongyang
and establish peace in the region.
Although the two did not go into details on when Kim might travel to the South,... it's
viewed that Kim's visit would help the ongoing push for peace.
The Blue House official said the question now is on whether the North Korean leader
sticks to his pledge.
On North Korea sanctions,...
Presidents Moon and Trump agreed that keeping the regime under already imposed sanctions
is necessary until the Korean Peninsula is completely denuclearized.
While the two allies share the goal of complete denuclearization,... their approach on how
to achieve it isn't in lockstep.
Seoul has been pushing to improve ties with Pyeongyang through economic engagement,...
while Washington has been pursuing a dual policy of pressure and dialogue which has
caused friction between the North and the U.S.
"The meeting between Presidents Moon and Trump was a chance to reopen the possibility of
Kim Jong-un visiting Seoul by the years' end-- in the hope that it could give the stalled
denuclearization process another push.
Shin Se-min, Arirang News, Buenos Aires."
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