Experts have been left scratching their heads over one of the most concrete concessions President Trump says he received from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un during Tuesday's summit in Singapore. At a press conference after their meeting, Trump said Kim had agreed to destroy "a major missile engine testing site." "That was not in your agreement," Trump told reporters. "I got that after we signed the agreement. I said, 'Do me a favor. You've got this missile engine testing site. We know where it is because of the heat.' It's incredible the equipment we have, to be honest with you. I said, 'Can you close it up?' He's going to close it up." But North Korea has several test facilities scattered across the country. Each site has a different role in the nation's missile program, and some are more valuable than others. "It could be something important, or it could be something less significant," says Joseph Bermudez Jr. , an imagery analyst with the website 38 North, which tracks North Korea
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