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North Korea’s Kim lands in Singapore for historic meeting with Trump

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SINGAPORE — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un landed in Singapore on Sunday ahead of a summit with US President Donald Trump that could end a nuclear stand-off between the old foes and transform his secretive, impoverish­ed country.

When Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim meet on the resort island of Sentosa on Tuesday they will be making history even before they start.

Enemies since the 1950- 53 Korean War, the leaders of North Korea and the United States have never met previously — or even spoken on the phone.

Mr. Kim arrived at Singapore’s Changi Airport after his longest trip overseas as head of state wearing his trademark dark Maoist suit and distinctiv­e high cut hairstyle.

He was greeted by Singapore’s foreign minister, Vivian Balakrishn­an, who posted a picture on Twitter of him shaking hands with Mr. Kim and the message: “Welcomed Chairman Kim Jong Un, who has just arrived in Singapore.”

Believed to be 34, portly and baby-faced, Mr. Kim is one of the youngest heads of state in the world and looks an unlikely candidate to be making history of the kind that has eluded his father and grandfathe­r, both past leaders of North Korea.

But since taking power in 2011 on his father’s death, the youthful Mr. Kim has displayed a mixture of ruthlessne­ss, pragmatism and statecraft to get this prize — to sit across the table with the leader of the United States and be treated as an equal.

The two countries were on the brink of war last year, with their leaders trading insults and threats, until Mr. Kim made a dramatic offer in March to meet Mr. Trump and discuss nuclear disarmamen­t, which the American president quickly accepted.

PARIAH NO MORE

Mr. Kim’s journey from internatio­nal pariah to being regarded as a responsibl­e head of state has taken just a few months.

After inheriting a nuclear program that was fitful and making little progress, Mr. Kim poured socialist North Korea’s limited money into developing a nucleararm­ed missile capable of hitting the United States.

North Korea announced it had achieved that capability late last year.

Although unproved, the claim carried enough credence for Washington to take Mr. Kim more seriously.

On Thursday, Mr. Trump dangled the prospect of normalized relations with the United States, and even a White House visit for Mr. Kim if he ditched his nuclear arsenal.

For Mr. Kim, nearly 40 years Mr. Trump’s junior and representi­ng the third generation of North Korea’s ruling dynasty, the summit affords both him and his long- isolated country the internatio­nal legitimacy his father and grandfathe­r could only dream of.

Mr. Trump said he and Mr. Kim could even sign an agreement to end the Korean War, which was concluded only with a truce, not a peace treaty.

RUTHLESS

Mr. Kim is also one of the most ruthless leaders in the world.

He has been accused of ordering the killing of his uncle, who was shot by a firing squad using anti-aircraft guns, and his halfbrothe­r, who could have been a challenger and was poisoned with a nerve agent at Kuala Lumpur airport in Malaysia.

At his behest, about 340 officers in Pyongyang whose loyalty was suspect have been purged or executed, according to South Korean intelligen­ce.

Mr. Kim decided early on in his tenure that nuclear weapons were the only way to ensure security for his isolated nation and be taken seriously by the rest of the world.

Despite North Korea being one of the world’s poorest countries, enormous resources were spent on the ballistic missile and nuclear programs.

In September, after North Korea conducted its sixth and largest nuclear test, Mr. Trump said in a tweet that Mr. Kim was “obviously a madman who doesn’t mind starving or killing his people.”

Mr. Kim called Mr. Trump “a mentally deranged US dotard.”

But this year, things have changed at a head- spinning pace.

In his New Year message, Mr. Kim extended an olive branch to enemy South Korea, sent a team to the Winter Olympics there in February, and held two summits with South Korean President Moon Jae-in in April and May.

He also made two secret trips to China since March to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, and hosted US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo twice in Pyongyang.

Just a week before his April visit to the demilitari­zed zone for his first summit with Mr. Moon, Mr. Kim declared an end to nuclear testing, effectivel­y ending his byungjin twin strategy that pursues nuclear prowess alongside economic developmen­t.

Mr. Kim said he would instead put all efforts into jumpstarti­ng economic growth for his country of more than 25 million people.

SKEPTICS

Many remain skeptical Mr. Kim will ever completely abandon his nuclear programs.

They believe his latest engagement is aimed at getting the United States to ease crippling economic sanctions that have squeezed the impoverish­ed country.

Mr. Trump, who has led a “maximum pressure” campaign against North Korea, has insisted that Mr. Kim first provide verifiable proof that he will irreversib­ly dismantle North Korea’s nuclear arsenal.

But Mr. Kim has shown surprising diplomatic skills in his meetings with overseas leaders this year and a smiling and affable side as he went clearly out of his way to be cordial to Mr. Moon.

Mr. Trump is far less predictabl­e, but badly needs the kudos that a successful summit will bring ahead of congressio­nal elections in November.

The two leaders meet at 9 a.m. (0100 GMT) on Tuesday at the Capella on Sentosa island, a refurbishe­d British Army artillery mess that is now one of Singapore’s most expensive luxury hotels. —

 ??  ?? A JUNE 10 HANDOUT PHOTO of Singapore’s Ministry of Communicat­ions and Informatio­n shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shaking hands with Singapore’s Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishn­an after arriving in Singapore.
A JUNE 10 HANDOUT PHOTO of Singapore’s Ministry of Communicat­ions and Informatio­n shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shaking hands with Singapore’s Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishn­an after arriving in Singapore.

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