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Trump-Kim summit: US assures allies after 'war games' cancelled
After his summit with North Korea's Kim Jong-un, Donald Trump promised to cancel his country's joint military exercises with South Korea. Now the Pentagon has moved to reassure US allies in eastern Asia that the president retains an "ironclad" commitment to maintaining security in the region.
Mr Trump's announcement on so-called "war games" is seen as a large concession to Mr Kim, who - according to North Korean state media - has accepted an invitation to visit the US. Mr Trump, who called Mr Kim a "funny guy", has also been asked to come to Pyongyang.
The biggest issue on the table - the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula - was also discussed, with Mr Kim confirming his "unwavering commitment" to it. Whatever happens, writes BBC North America reporter Anthony Zurcher, the summit - with all its odd moments - shows that US and international politics "have been turned upside down".
Korea analyst Jenny Town looks at what has been achieved so far.
Brexit: Tory MPs set for 'concession' talks
Theresa May averted a Commons rebellion over plans to give MPs a "meaningful" say over a final Brexit deal with the EU. Now Conservative MPs are to discuss in further detail what their role will be if no agreement is reached with Brussels by December. Some MPs say they were offered real "input", in a last-minute concession ahead of a key vote on the EU Withdrawal Bill.
But Solicitor General Robert Buckland argued that allowing Parliament to "instruct" the government on what to do in the event of no deal would leave the UK in "very rocky constitutional territory". BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg says there have been "very, very dark mutterings" from those who were "persuaded by what they thought was a promise".
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