The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

N. Korea, Russia on Japan’s agenda for Biden visit

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

Nuclear disarmamen­t and North Korea’s abduction of Japanese nationals are likely to top the agenda as the Japanese government steps up its preparatio­ns for an anticipate­d visit by U.S. President Joe Biden in late May.

ere has been no progress on the abduction issue in recent years, and abductees’ families are aging: Shigeo Iizuka, who served as head of the Associatio­n of the Families of Victims Kidnapped by North Korea, died in December, age 83. Iizuka’s younger sister Yaeko Taguchi was among those abducted by Pyongyang.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu

Matsuno told reporters April 13 that the government is working toward realizing a meeting between Biden and the families. Tokyo is expected to recon rm Washington’s cooperatio­n in resolving the abduction issue during the U.S. president’s visit.

Japan also hopes to stipulate in a joint bilateral statement that it will cooperate with the United States on the issue of nuclear disarmamen­t. Prime Minister Fumio Kishida hails from Hiroshima and has made it his life’s work to realize a nuclear arms-free world. Biden, too, has a strong interest in nuclear disarmamen­t and some members of the Kishida administra­tion have oated the idea of asking Biden to visit the atomic-bombed cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

ere have been calls within the government to treat Biden as a state guest, in keeping with the welcome a orded to many previous U.S. leaders. As a state guest, Biden would receive the highest level of hospitalit­y — the honor would also underline the strength of the Japan-U.S. alliance. State guests are invited to a welcome ceremony at the Imperial Palace and a banquet with the

Emperor and Empress.

However, a Quad summit — to be attended by the leaders of Japan, Australia, India and the United States — is planned for the day a er the Japan-U.S. summit meeting, meaning the prime ministers of Australia and India will be in Japan at the same time as Biden.

“It would invite criticism if the U.S. president were to receive preferenti­al treatment,” a senior Foreign Ministry o cial said.

Attention will be focused on whether Japan, the United States and Australia can cooperate with India — which traditiona­lly has had close ties with Moscow — over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. During the Japan-U.S. summit meeting, Tokyo and Washington will thus likely share their views on the best way to deal with India. (April 16)

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