Peninsula issue calls for sincere actions
Editor's note: US President Donald Trump is scheduled to hold a second summit with Democratic People's Republic of Korea leader Kim Jong-un in late February. The two leaders held their path-breaking summit in Singapore in June last year, though negotiations on the Korean Peninsula's denuclearization seem to have floundered after that. What can we expect from the second summit? And how can the two sides break the current stalemate? Two experts share their views on the issue with China Daily's Liu Jianna. Excerpts follow:
Specific and executable consensus needed
Unlike the vague agreements reached at the Singapore summit, the two sides need to reach a more specific and executable consensus on the Korean Peninsula denuclearization process at the second meeting. If the meeting doesn't go smoothly, the situation on the peninsula may take a sudden turn, reversing the mitigating process that has held promise for the past months thanks to the historic meeting between the two leaders.