First term (2011–2016) Trọng was elected
General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam in 2011 at the
11th National Congress, making him the top leader of Vietnam. The 5th plenum of the 11th Central Committee decided to take the Central Steering Committee for Anti-Corruption away from the
Prime Minister's control and Trọng was elected its head.
Domestic policy In 2012, he urged the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) to adopt Resolution No. 12, which called for party building and
self-criticism amongst party officials, calling them to lead by example and be held accountable for corruption and waste. Afterwards, the
Central Steering Committee on Anti-corruption was directly placed under the administration of the Politburo. He further passed the Decision 244 of the CPV, establishing a formalized process of political succession and restricting the ability of CPV delegates to select new Central Committee members by requiring the outgoing Central Committee to approve the candidates. It also prohibited Politburo members from nominating Central Committee candidates without support from the Politburo.
United States On 6 July 2015, General Secretary Trọng arrived in the United States to begin his United States visit to 10 July 2015. This visit coincided with the milestone of twenty years since the
United States and
Vietnam normalized diplomatic relations. The talks with President
Barack Obama were about human rights, security and defense and the
Trans-Pacific Partnership. Trọng was the first Vietnamese party chief to make a state visit to the United States. He also met
Vice President Biden and former
president Clinton. At a talk at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, he spoke frankly about democracy in Vietnam with American scholars.
India during his visit to
India in 2013|right On 20 November 2013, Trọng paid an official visit to India. This State-level visit to India also aims to contribute to strengthening Vietnam-India relations, bringing the strategic partnership between the two countries to a new level, more substantive and more effective.
Russia During Trọng's first term, Vietnam and
Russia upgraded their relationship to a comprehensive strategic partnership in 2012. Following
Russia's annexation of Crimea, Vietnam abstained from
voting to declare the annexation through a referendum invalid at the United Nations.
Second term (2016–2021) On 27 January 2016, Trọng was re-elected as General Secretary by the 1st Plenary Session of the 12th Central Committee. In his second term, Trọng launched a large
anti-corruption campaign, with the Politburo taking disciplinary actions against 110 senior Party members between 2017 and 2020, including three Politburo members, one former Politburo member, 10 Central Committee members and 17 former Central Committee members. Some of the disciplinary actions included criminal charges. He compared this campaign to a burning furnace ("đốt lò"), hence the name
Burning Furnace Campaign (Chiến dịch Đốt Lò). The campaign is considered by observers to be an effort by the Party to regain power and prestige as well as strengthen people's trust in the
government and the Party's leadership. Especially during his third term, Trọng's government handled many notable corruption cases, such as
Việt Á scandal and the 304 trillion dong (12 billion
USD)
Van Thinh Phat Holdings Group case.
Presidency (2018–2021) in
Sochi, Russia, 6 September 2018|right in front of a statue of Vietnamese revolutionary leader
Ho Chi Minh, 27 February 2019 in
Hanoi, 2019|right Trọng visited China in January 2017, where Beijing and Hanoi signed 15 cooperation documents in various fields and issued a 10-point joint communiqué to deepen Sino-Vietnamese relations. According to state media, the two leaders pledged to continue the "friendly neighbourliness, comprehensive cooperation, long-term stability, towards the future" between China and Vietnam. In November 2017, the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping
paid a return visit to Vietnam, where the two sides discussed renewed cooperation on production capacity, energy, cross-border economic cooperation zones, e-commerce, human resources, economy and trade, finance, culture, health, information, social sciences and border defense. On 3 October 2018, following the death of President
Trần Đại Quang, the Central Committee of the CPV formally nominated Trọng for the presidency, which was voted on at a subsequent session of the
National Assembly, where the party holds an overwhelming majority. This made Trọng the third person to simultaneously serve as both head of the party and state, after
Hồ Chí Minh (in
North Vietnam only) and
Trường Chinh. The National Assembly elected Trọng as president on 23 October with 99.79% percent of the vote in a meeting of the sixth session of the National Assembly. His swearing-in ceremony took place at the Grand Hall and was broadcast live on the afternoon on state radio and television systems. In February 2019, Vietnam was chosen to host the
2019 North Korea–United States Hanoi Summit. Trọng met two leaders as a neutral host state leader. Trọng met
Donald Trump and
Kim Jong Un during the summit. On 14 April, it was reported that Trọng had been rushed to the Chợ Rẫy Hospital in
Ho Chi Minh City after visiting
Kiên Giang while celebrating his 75th birthday, according to overseas news sources. He was rumoured to have suffered a stroke. The Vietnamese government initially had no comment on the subject matter, but later confirmed from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Vietnam that he was "unwell, but will soon return to work". He reappeared a month later on 14 May to discuss about the upcoming Party Congress.
Third term (2021–2024) On 31 January 2021, Trọng was re-elected as General Secretary for a third term by the 1st Plenary Session of the 13th Central Committee, making him the first leader since
Lê Duẩn (1969–1986) to serve more than two terms. On 1 February 2021, Trọng attended a press conference. Trọng said: Trọng was the first person to be elected as CPV general secretary for a third term since 1986. The National Assembly on 2 April 2021 voted to relieve Trọng’s presidency with 91.25% of the vote. Trọng remained de facto top leader in the country, serving as the General Secretary of the Communist Party. He was succeeded by
Nguyễn Xuân Phúc. When the
Russian invasion of Ukraine broke out in February 2022, Vietnam maintained a neutral stance, abstaining from voting at most United Nations voting sessions on resolutions related to the invasion. Between 30 October and 2 November, Trọng visited China and met
Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
general secretary Xi Jinping, becoming the first foreign leader to meet Xi after he secured a third term in the
20th CCP National Congress. Both leaders released a joint statement, calling for cooperation in economic, political, defense and security areas and working together in "the fight against terrorism, 'peaceful evolution', 'colour revolution' and the politicisation of human rights issues". During Xi's 2023 visit, the two leaders agreed to build "
a community of shared future for humankind", months after Hanoi upgraded its formal relations with the United States. In January 2023, Phúc resigned from the presidency due to corruption scandals, leading Trọng's ally
Võ Văn Thưởng to succeed him in March. From 21 to 23 May 2023, the deputy chairman of Russia's
Security Council, and former president and prime minister,
Dmitry Medvedev, visited Vietnam and met with Trọng. They discussed the strengthening of ties between Russia and Vietnam and the current international situation. During a visit to Vietnam on 10 September 2023, U.S. president Joe Biden visited with Trọng, with the Vietnamese government upgrading the relationship between the countries to that of a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, the highest awarded by Vietnam. On 19 June 2024, Russian president
Vladimir Putin visited Vietnam and met with Trọng. Putin thanked Vietnam for its "balanced position" on Russia's invasion of Ukraine. File:Kishida Fumio and Nguyen Phu Trong 2022.jpg|Trọng with Japanese prime minister
Fumio Kishida in 2022 File: Xi jinping and Nguyễn Phú Trọng.jpg|Trọng with CCP general secretary
Xi Jinping in October 2022 File:Joe Biden Nguyen Phu Trong 2023.jpg|Trọng with U.S. president
Joe Biden in September 2023 File:Vladimir Putin and Nguyen Phu Trong (2024-06-20) 02.jpg|Trọng with Russian president
Vladimir Putin in
Hanoi, June 2024. It was his last public appearance. == Political positions ==