Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit RACHEL MARTIN, HOST: The leaders of North and South Korea are making history at the DMZ. STEVE INSKEEP, HOST: Yeah. Kim Jong Un became the first North Korean leader to walk across the line into South Korea. After years of raising tensions and testing nuclear weapons, Kim shook hands with his South Korean counterpart and said he hoped for a new history of peace. (SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING) KIM JONG UN: (Foreign language spoken). INSKEEP: Kim is saying there that this summit should be just a start, and that he hopes the people's wishes for peace will be satisfied to a degree. MARTIN: To a degree. So NPR's Elise Hu covers the Korean Peninsula for us. She joins us from very close to the summit, where, I understand, Elise, the two leaders have actually just signed some kind of symbolic agreement? What's going on? ELISE HU, BYLINE: That's right. This news is actually breaking right now. And the voice you hear behind me is the voice of North Korean
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