After days of speculation, it has been confirmed that North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un has visited China.
The visit, confirmed by China and North Korea, was Mr Kim’s first known foreign trip since taking office in 2011.
Mr Kim held “successful talks” with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing, China’s Xinhua news agency reported.
China is North Korea’s main economic ally and it was thought highly likely it would consult Beijing before planned summits with South Korea and the US.
Mr Kim is due to meet South Korean President Moon Jae-in in April, and US President Donald Trump in May.
The Beijing visit is considered a significant step in North Korea’s preparation for the proposed talks.
During the visit, Mr Kim assured his Chinese counterpart he was committed to giving up his nuclear weapons, China’s Xinhua news agency reported, but with conditions.
“The issue of denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula can be resolved, if South Korea and the United States respond to our efforts with goodwill, create an atmosphere of peace and stability while taking progressive and synchronous measures for the realisation of peace,” Mr Kim was reported saying.
North Korea’s KCNA news agency called the visit “a milestone” in improving bilateral ties with China.
“It makes sense for North Korea to explain their positions and co-ordinate with China, their most important partner,” Andray Abrahamian, research fellow at Pacific Forum CSIS told the BBC.
“Relations have been extremely strained the last five years and China has been sidelined in the diplomacy of the last several months,” he said.
“From Beijing’s perspective, this is a visit that should have happened some time ago.”
“They have two upcoming summits – one with Seoul and one with Washington – and they are probably interested in hearing the Chinese position as well.”
KCNA also said Mr Xi had accepted an invitation to return the visit.
The comments China’s media attributed to both leaders are pretty illuminating if true.
Mr Kim reportedly told Mr Xi that because “the situation is developing rapidly” he felt he should come to Beijing in person “out of comradeship and moral responsibility”.
Given how tense relations have been recently, following China’s imposition of tough economic sanctions, it’s significant that Kim made Beijing his first foreign trip, before his planned meetings with Moon and Trump.
Crucially, Xi reportedly said China “sticks to the goal of denuclearisation of the peninsula” and Kim responded: “It is our consistent stand to be committed to denuclearisation.”
This may sound bizarre, but there is logic there. They would argue that if they felt sufficiently secure there would be no need for such weapons.
The fact that Kim is on the record saying this in Beijing in front of Xi may show that the North Koreans are paving the way for a face-saving nuclear disarmament.
US credits ‘maximum pressure’ policy Mr Kim arrived with his wife, Ri Sol Ju, on Sunday and left Beijing on Tuesday afternoon, according to reports.
The trip is the latest in a flurry of diplomatic activity in recent weeks after ties between North and South Korea began improving at the start of the year and during the Winter Olympics in South Korea.
“We see this development as further evidence that our campaign of maximum pressure is creating the appropriate atmosphere for dialogue with North Korea,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said.
Trump: N Korea talks could bring world’s ‘greatest deal’ The political gamble of the 21st Century Last month, Mr Trump accepted an unprecedented invitation to meet Mr Kim, after months of hostility and North Korean missile tests.
If the summit goes ahead, Mr Trump would become the first sitting US President to meet a North Korean leader.