Reuters: Two Koreas hold high-stakes summit with nuclear talks in jeopardy
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in is set to cross the heavily militarized border on Tuesday for his third summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, seeking to cement a breakthrough in faltering nuclear talks between Pyongyang and Washington.
The inter-Korean summit will be a litmus test for another meeting Kim has recently proposed to U.S. President Donald Trump, giving clues to whether Kim is serious about denuclearization, a commitment he made at their first encounter in June.
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More News On Tomorrow's Korean Summit
S. Korea's Moon wants 'heart-to-heart' summit talks with Kim -- ABC News/AP
Moon seeks to break nuclear deadlock at Pyongyang summit -- AFP
Moon says he and Kim will discuss ways to move denuclearization forward -- Yonhap News Agency
Denuclearization, improving relations at top of summit agenda -- Korea Herald
Denuclearisation to top Moon's Pyongyang agenda -- AFP
Moon Jae-in prepares for make or break inter-Korean summit with Kim Jong-un -- The Guardian
South Korea plays down chance of nuke progress at Kim summit -- FOX News/AP
Should Korean Leaders Discuss Nuclear Issue or Military Tensions? -- VOA
Advantage: Kim Jong-un -- Ethan Epstein, Weekly Standard
What to expect from the third summit between leaders of North and South Korea -- Gavin Fernando, News.com.au