After months of a fragile mood of peace, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump will hold high-stakes talks in Singapore next week that could transform the regional and global security landscape.
Two acronyms sum up their goals -- CVID and CVIG.
The US has sought the complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearization of the communist nation, but the North wants a guarantee of security so as to avoid the fate of the former regimes of Libya and Iraq.
If Kim and Trump produce a deal, it would be called the "Trump model."
US President Donald Trump (L) and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. (Yonhap)
The two sides are still in consultations on specific agenda items, although the summit schedule and venue have been decided. It will take place at the Capella Hotel on Singapore's Sentosa Island, starting at 9 a.m. (local time), according to the White House.
In Korea, senior diplomats of the North and the US have negotiated what will be on the table.
Many predict their Panmunjom discussions will last until shortly before the Kim-Trump meeting, the first-ever face-to-face meeting between the leaders of the Korean War foes.
It raises hopes for a landmark breakthrough in efforts to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue and bring lasting peace to the peninsula -- goals that have eluded leaders for decades amid on-again, off-again talks involving the North.
"The most the US seeks seems to be the complete dismantling of North Korea's nuclear weapons and ICBMs and transporting fissile materials out of the country," said Kim Joon-hyung, professor of international affairs at Handong University.
What North Korea desires is, he added, normalized relations with the US through a formal end to the Korean War, a nonaggression commitment and the establishment of a peace treaty, as well as the speedy lifting of sanctions.
While the North has kept mum on its summit preparations, Trump's and his Twitter messages are a rare "credible" source of relevant information.
Trump initially talked about a speedy "all-in-one," or one-shot, option in which North Korea gives up its arsenal soon after an agreement is reached, as the North's leader reportedly prefers a "phased, synchronized" process.
Emerging from a White House meeting with a North Korean envoy last week, Trump indicated that he won't rush to a deal and might accept an incremental approach.
"The big deal will be on June 12th. And again it's a process. ... We're not going to go in and sign something on June 12th, and we never were. We're going to start a process," he told reporters. "We can go fast. We can go slowly. And I think it'll be a process. I never said it goes in one meeting.
It's not certain whether he has actually lowered the bar or merely sought to lower public expectations for a significant breakthrough from his first meeting with Kim.
Speaking at a Singapore security forum at the weekend, Secretary of State Jim Mattis pointed out that a "bumpy road" lies ahead even in the best-case scenario.
He warned the North not to expect any "relief" to the sanctions in place against the regime before its full denuclearization.
If Trump walks out of the historic summit without a written agreement, it would be considered a failure and he would face harsh political attacks at home, months ahead of the mid-term elections.
The former businessman, who styles himself as a master negotiator, may sign a framework of denuclearization-for-regime security measures and let working-level officials handle "the devil in the details."
"I think there will be compromise on the principle of full denuclearization and a security guarantee," said Yang Moo-jin, who teaches at the University of North Korean Studies. "In addition, there could be a few more deals on issues such as a roadmap for denuclearization and its timetable."
Another key question is whether Trump and Kim will strike an agreement on formally ending the Korean War, which ended in a truce 65 years ago.
Trump said he had talked with the North's envoy on the matter. In case of an agreement on the highly symbolic issue in Singapore, South Korean President Moon Jae-in may fly there for a ceremony.
Moon's office Cheong Wa Dae said it's up to Pyongyang and Washington and that no decision has been made yet.(Yonhap)