Updated at 11:47 a.m. ET
President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un arrived in Singapore Sunday ahead of a highly anticipated summit.
which will be the first-ever meeting between a U.S. president and a North Korean leader from a G7 meeting in Quebec, Canada. Kim arrived on an Air China jet, NPR's Elise Hu reports.
President Trump has arrived in Singapore ahead of his upcoming summit w North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Photo via pool reporter
— Shirley Henry (@shirleyhenrydc)
Aboard Air Force One en route to Singapore, Trump , "I look forward to meeting [Kim] and have a feeling that this one-time opportunity will not be wasted!"
Singapore Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan to Singapore. Later, at Lee's office in the sprawling palace known as the Istana. A few hours after that, Balakrishnan was on hand when Trump stepped off Air Force One.

President Trump has said he will use the summit, scheduled to begin Tuesday, to push for North Korea's denuclearization. Trump and Kim Jong-Un have both suggested they could also , which ceased because of signed in 1953.
It is unclear, however, under what terms North Korea would agree to in an effort to reduce its nuclear arsenal. Trump has offered few details of what a framework for that process would look like.
"We suspect it'll be more of a pronouncement in which the two countries express interest in that direction, and then the details will get bogged down," . "So view this as ... the laying of a vision, a little bit of sizzle on the steak."
Hammering out a complete plan for North Korea's denuclearization would be "an impossible chore" at this summit, told NPR's Windsor Johnston. While Kim has shown he's willing to bargain, O'Hanlon said, "Giving up his nuclear weapons is probably going to be the last step in that process, not the first step."
Trump arrived in Singapore after a group of close American allies. At the G7 summit in Canada and in the hours afterward, Trump railed against trade practices that he described as unfair and said he'd given U.S. representatives instructions to that outlined a mutual plan to ensure "free, fair, and mutually beneficial trade."
U.S. allies are worried that Trump could upend decades of international precedent, "Diplomacy requires a certain amount of trust and consistency. And that certainly wasn't the theme of this week's meeting at the G7."
White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said Sunday that Trump's public show of frustration with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other allies was part of a larger plan.
"[President Trump] is not going to permit any show of weakness on the trip to negotiate with North Korea," . "Kim must not see American weakness."
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