In less than a year, Donald Trump went from threatening Kim Jong Un with annihilation to the first face-to-face talks between a sitting U.S. President and a North Korean leader. The summit on June 12 was the latest and most dramatic example of how the impulsive President is upending the global order. Days earlier, after a testy economic gathering with six of America's closest allies, Trump watched Canadian Prime Minster Justin Trudeau declare that new U.S. trade tariffs were unfair and ordered his aides to back out of thar summit’s final communiqué, which had already been publicly released. That’s how things work now. Early on, Trump heeded his top aides when they urged caution. In the past six months, he has taken increasingly dramatic risks—especially in foreign policy. In December, Trump committed to moving the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, overriding the dire predictions about Middle East chaos. In March, he threatened to impose stiff trade tariffs on China and Europe, then enacted them two months later after global markets generally bounced back from initial losses. In May, he withdrew the U.S. from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, even though Europe, international agencies and some of his own senior aides said Iran was complying with it. Trump has become energized by the idea that he’s shattering precedent, and feels vindicated by the results of his moves, according to interviews with more than a dozen friends, aides and former officials. “He recognizes that people always are running around, it seems, with their hair on fire,” senior White House aide Kellyanne Conway told TIME. Nowhere are the stakes are higher than in North Korea. Read this week’s full cover story on TIME.com. Photograph by Kevin Lim (@limkevo)—@straits_times/@gettyimages. Animation by @brobeldesign for TIME

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In less than a year, Donald Trump went from threatening Kim Jong Un with annihilation to the first face-to-face talks between a sitting U.S. President and a North Korean leader. The summit on June 12 was the latest and most dramatic example of how the impulsive President is upending the global order. Days earlier, after a testy economic gathering with six of America's closest allies, Trump watched Canadian Prime Minster Justin Trudeau declare that new U.S. trade tariffs were unfair and ordered his aides to back out of thar summit’s final communiqué, which had already been publicly released. That’s how things work now. Early on, Trump heeded his top aides when they urged caution. In the past six months, he has taken increasingly dramatic risks—especially in foreign policy. In December, Trump committed to moving the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, overriding the dire predictions about Middle East chaos. In March, he threatened to impose stiff trade tariffs on China and Europe, then enacted them two months later after global markets generally bounced back from initial losses. In May, he withdrew the U.S. from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, even though Europe, international agencies and some of his own senior aides said Iran was complying with it. Trump has become energized by the idea that he’s shattering precedent, and feels vindicated by the results of his moves, according to interviews with more than a dozen friends, aides and former officials. “He recognizes that people always are running around, it seems, with their hair on fire,” senior White House aide Kellyanne Conway told TIME. Nowhere are the stakes are higher than in North Korea. Read this week’s full cover story on TIME.com. Photograph by Kevin Lim (@limkevo)—@straits_times/@gettyimages. Animation by @brobeldesign for TIME


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