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In an interview with a broadcasting company, President Trump called North Korea's nuclear facilities five places, attracting more attention than elsewhere. First, uranium enrichment facilities, including the steel line near Pyongyang, are being discussed.

In Washington, Son Seokmin correspondent reports.

<Reporter>

In an interview with Fox News yesterday, President Trump said North Korea had broken down its nuclear facilities at one or two of its five nuclear facilities at the time of the summit.

"It's not good," he said to Kim Jong-un, "Let's get a real deal," but it's not accepted.

[Trump / President (February 28): We have discovered a new nuclear facility that people did not know about. It seemed North Korea was very surprised that we knew this.]

This is the first time President Trump has identified five North Korean nuclear installations.

North Korea acknowledges that Pyongyang is a Yongbyon nuclear facility, but President Trump did not specify where else.

The facilities that Hanmi points to include the Kangsun area, which is 16 kilometers southwest of Pyongyang.

The US Institute of Scientific and International Security analyzed that the scale of centrifuges for extracting highly enriched uranium from the steel line is several times that of Yongbyon.

In addition, the South Korean military authorities believe that hundreds of centrifuges are hidden in Daesan, the westernmost general of Yongbyon.

In addition, there is an enrichment facility in the large uranium mine south of Hwanghae-do Sariwon.