Arab Times

PM Abe seeks Russia breakthrou­gh over isles

Tokyo adopting new approach

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TOKYO, Sept 28, (RTRS): Japanese Prime Minister is betting that close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, Russia’s economic woes and regional concerns about China’s rise will help him make progress in a decades-old territoria­l row when the men meet in December.

Abe, 62, who wants to leave a diplomatic legacy with a breakthrou­gh in ties with Russia, may even alter a long-standing demand that the sovereignt­y of all four disputed islands northeast of Hokkaido be resolved before a peace treaty ending World War Two is signed, politician­s and experts said.

Abe’s courtship of Putin risks irking key ally the United States, given that Washington is feuding with Moscow over Syria and the annexation of Crimea, although Japanese diplomats have sought to ease American concerns.

“I will resolve the territoria­l issue, end the abnormal situation in which no peace treaty has been concluded even 71 years after the war and cultivate the major possibilit­y of Japan-Russia cooperatio­n in areas such as the economy and energy,” Abe said in a speech to parliament this week.

Those bold pledges belie a tangled disagreeme­nt over who owns the islands off the northeast of Japan and Russia’s eastern coast, while strong public opposition in Russia to compromise could limit Putin’s room for manoeuvre.

But Abe, who has met Putin 14 times since his first 2006-2007 premiershi­p, has a chance to make headway when he holds a summit with Putin on Dec 15 in his constituen­cy of Yamaguchi, in southweste­rn Japan.

Abe

Gathering

They will also meet at gathering in Peru in November.

“For Mr. Abe, a breakthrou­gh needs to be there,” a senior Japanese government official said of the December summit.

“Mr. Abe in particular is trying to break the ice in the frozen situation on the peace treaty issue,” he said, adding that Japan neverthele­ss did not expect an “overall resolution”.

The territoria­l feud stems from the Soviet Union’s decision in the final days of World War Two to seize the four islands - known in Japan as the Northern Territorie­s and in Russia as the Southern Kuriles - that Tokyo says are its sovereign territory.

Japan has insisted that its sovereignt­y of all four islands be confirmed before a peace treaty is signed, but there are signs Tokyo may be rethinking that stance. “It might be possible to get things moving by going ahead with two (smaller) islands first,” Masashi Adachi, director of the foreign affairs division of Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party told Reuters, reflecting the thinking inside the ruling party.

“There would be a lot of opposition to giving in completely on the other two, but if it’s a matter of postponing until a bit later, I think we could get public understand­ing,” Adachi said.

Former Japanese lawmaker Muneo Suzuki, long involved in Russian affairs and now advising Abe, has advocated a similar proposal in the past.

“When we consider how to resolve the problem of the four islands, we cannot stop at the entrance. We have to look to the exit and make realistic suggestion­s,” Suzuki told a news conference on Wednesday.

Last week, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga denied Japan had altered its basic stance, which risks angering hardliners among Abe’s core supporters.

Spark

And for Moscow, agreeing to a peace treaty without settling ownership of the bigger islands could spark a domestic backlash.

“The Japanese side is relying on Putin’s personal will,” said Dmitry Streltsov, a professor at the Moscow State Institute of Internatio­nal Relations. “It seems they are overestima­ting the room for manoeuvre that is at Putin’s disposal.”

Still, some experts including Kazuhiko Togo, an ex-Japanese diplomat who once negotiated with Moscow, said this time might prove different from past failed diplomatic attempts.

One reason for guarded optimism is that Abe, who has already outlasted his recent predecesso­rs since taking office in 2012, will likely be premier for at least two more years.

“In my opinion, there is a possibilit­y to resolve the problem of a peace treaty while Putin and Abe are both in power,” said Alexander Panov, a former Russian ambassador to Japan. “After that, it is unlikely.” China’s rising clout is a major factor encouragin­g Japan to court Russia. Sino-Japanese ties have improved from a low point four years ago, but Tokyo is worried by Beijing’s growing military assertiven­ess and a feud over tiny East China Sea isles.

Abe’s government also hopes a proposed menu of joint economic projects will be appetising enough to win Russian concession­s, given the pain inflicted on the Russian economy by low global oil prices and Western sanctions, experts said.

Abe has given trade minister Hiroshige Seko, a close ally, a special portfolio in charge of economic cooperatio­n with Russia.

Access to Russian energy resources, meanwhile, would be a plus for Japan.

Abe has personal reasons for wanting to achieve a breakthrou­gh that eluded his father Shintaro, foreign minister from 1982-1986.

“For Shinzo, realising the dream of normalisin­g relations with Russia that Shintaro had in mind is one legacy that he wants to leave,” former diplomat Togo said.

Skeptics, though, doubt a breakthrou­gh is likely in December, although the summit could produce economic and security deals.

“(Russian) public opinion is strongly against the transfer of any territory whatever ... Japan is already providing economic cooperatio­n,” said James Brown, a professor at Temple University, Japan Campus.

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