Trump happens to be the first U.S. president who is willing to sit down with North Korea bilaterally in their 25 years of nuclear negotiations. Kim Jong-un therefore is willing to abandon his nuclear weapons through a grand bargain with Trump in exchange for the U.S.'s dropping its hostile policy toward North Korea, conclude a peace treaty, and denuclearize the entire Korean Peninsula (the non-nuclear weaponization of the Korean Peninsula).





In other words, Kim's charm offensive toward the U.S. can be interpreted in congruence with North Korea's decades-long goal that would try to ensure both its security and economic development, a policy that it has continually pursued since the collapse of the Soviet Union. North Korea's declaration that it has mastered a credible nuclear deterrence against the U.S. can be seen as a “conduit” to induce Washington to sit down at the negotiation table.





Second is the “nukes versus economy” paradox. Kim desires to improve his country's economy. The problem is that unless he denuclearizes, he cannot do so due to sanctions. Pompeo said that Washington will agree to lift sanctions on North Korea if the country agrees to completely dismantle its nuclear weapons program, a move that would create economic prosperity that “will rival” South Korea. As a rational choice, Kim can opt for denuclearization if it is more “lucrative” than going nuclear.





The third has to do with Kim's young age. Kim is 34. He wants to be around for the next 50 years or more, if he can. It's quite likely that he wants to rule the country for that period as well. However, he doesn't want to rule an impoverished nuclear country for the next 50 years. That will be just a continuation of what North Korea is today with a hobbled economy.





These three narratives are not mutually exclusive. The 12 hours of the inter-Korean summit at Panmunjeom, televised worldwide, was a moment of “rediscovering” the North Korean leader. From the common perception of thinking of him as an abnormal leader in an abnormal country, his behavior and words were too shocking, if not unexpected. Many observers were not equipped with the necessary information and conceptual acceleration, which would necessitate them to change their pre-existing frame of analysis. Thus, they concluded, Kim was playing.





However, remarks from those who met Kim personally, including U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, establish some grounds to the proposition that North Korea under Kim III may be different, this time. Pompeo said the U.S. has an “unprecedented opportunity” to change the historical course of the Korean Peninsula. Perhaps Pompeo saw something.



