Kim Jong Un's arrival in Vietnam by train this week for a second meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump may be most remarkable for how normal it's becoming.
Since opening talks with South Korea last year, the once-reclusive North Korean leader has turned into one of the most sought-after guests in Asia. At each stop — from Beijing to Singapore and now Hanoi — Kim, 35, was escorted down red carpets by officials eager to build early ties with the head of one of the world's last untapped emerging markets.
The swing from international pariah to guest of honor is a testament to Kim's success in wresting power from military chieftains and eliminating rivals since his father died in 2011. It also illustrates his long-held desire to restore an economy drained by decades of famine, state planning and military expansion under his father and grandfather.
"If you want to really understand the Kim Jong Un of the present, you have to travel back to his early years," said Kim Young-Hui, who defected from North Korea in 2002 and is now a senior economist at the Korea Development Bank's Inter-Korean Economic Cooperation Research Unit.
He wondered why his father, Kim Jong Il, hadn't traveled overseas much "and why North Korea was so poor," she said, citing a book by a Japanese chef who worked for the late dictator. "Kim Jong Un was thinking that when he became the leader, he would run the country a lot better than his reclusive father."
Over the past seven years, the Swiss-educated Kim has steered North Korea from his father's "military first" policy focused on building a nuclear arsenal to one that emphasizes the economy. After successfully testing an intercontinental ballistic missile in 2017, he declared the weapons program "complete," initiated talks with Trump and announced a new strategy for boosting the economy.
The move ended Trump's threats of war and paved the way for a historic first meeting with the U.S. president in June. It also opened a new world of potential investors from Seoul to Singapore — provided Kim can get Trump to relax international sanctions against his weapons program.
In recent months, Kim has railed against the sanctions, which do everything from ban travel by officials to curb its energy imports. North Korea ranks as one of the world's poorest countries and the sanctions are believed to have helped cause the country's deepest recession in two decades in 2017, according to South Korean estimates.