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Kim Jong Un is taking a laborious 3.5-day train ride to meet Trump in Vietnam, and it could be because he's too embarrassed to borrow a plane from China

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Kim jong un

  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is in the middle of a 3-1/2-day train trip to Hanoi, Vietnam, where he is scheduled to meet US President Donald Trump for their second summit.
  • Experts say his reasoning for taking such a slow means of transport may be to show he is not overly reliant on China.
  • Kim took an Air China plane to his summit with Trump in Singapore in June, which led to commentary emphasizing his inability to fly himself there.
  • Those comments reportedly didn't sit well with Kim.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is taking a 2,000-mile, 3-1/2-day train ride to meet US President Donald Trump in Vietnam this Wednesday, most likely to save face because he doesn't want to ask China to lend him a plane.

Kim boarded his family's armored train at Pyongyang Station on Saturday evening, and he plans to arrive in the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi on Tuesday, the day before his summit is scheduled there with Trump.

Kim crossed into Dandong, a Chinese city bordering North Korea, late Saturday, the Associated Press reported. The trip will take him through southeastern China before he eventually arrives in Hanoi.

Read more:Take a tour of the closest Chinese city to North Korea — the nearest thing to the outside world most North Koreans will ever see

He passed by the southeastern Chinese city of Hengyang around Monday afternoon local time, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported.

kim jong un pyongyang hanoi map

According to INSIDER's calculations, the trip will span at least 2,000 miles.

The specifics of his trip are not clear. Citing Vietnamese officials, The New York Times reported on Sunday that Kim would leave his train at China's border with Vietnam and travel the last 105 miles or so to Hanoi by car.

While Kim's laborious, three-day train ride will undoubtedly give him a good look at China's cities and countryside, experts say his reason for the journey more likely has to do with pride than with tourism.

Kim Jong Un train

Last year, Kim borrowed a Boeing 747 plane from Air China, the airline majority-owned by the Chinese state, to get himself to Singapore in June for his first summit with Trump.

His 40-year-old, Soviet-made Ilyushin Il-62 plane was deemed unsafe for the voyage at the time.

kim jong un air china singapore

Kim's use of a Chinese plane last year highlighted his apparent reliance on Beijing, which didn't have any delegates at Singapore but saw its global vision dominant at the summit.

The North Korean leader did not appreciate remarks about his reliance on China last year, Cheng Xiaohe, a North Korea expert at Beijing's Renmin University, told The New York Times.

"He does not want to show the world his heavy reliance on China by waving his hand in front of China's national flag on a Chinese plane as he did at the Singapore airport," Cheng told The Times.

"Traveling by train is a forced choice."

It's not clear what mode of transport Kim will take home.

Read more:Kim Jong Un rode his personal armored train to China to spend his 35th birthday with Xi Jinping

Trump and Kim

Trump has characterized the coming summit as a follow-up to the leaders' meeting in June, when Kim made a vague pledge to work toward denuclearization. Pyongyang appears not to have made much progress on that front.

US intelligence and North Korea experts have warned that Pyongyang is unlikely to give up its nuclear arms. An intelligence report published last month reiterated the idea that the country's leaders view nuclear arms as "critical to regime survival."

Trump has repeatedly played down hopes for any new breakthroughs with North Korea, and he told the Governors' Ball on Sunday that he was "not pushing for speed" with North Korea's denuclearization.

"I'm not in a rush," he said. "I don't want to rush anybody. I just don't want testing. As long as there's no testing, we're happy."

He added that US sanctions on North Korea would remain for the time being. Beijing for months has been urging the United Nations to relax some of its sanctions on North Korea.

SEE ALSO: A Vietnamese barbershop near Trump and Kim Jong Un's next summit is offering free Trump- and Kim-style haircuts

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NOW WATCH: North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un is 35 — here's how he became one of the world's scariest dictators


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