Bangkok Post

PM leaves for tour of EU, America

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Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida yesterday left on a tour of Europe and North America with security-focused talks on the agenda after his nation’s biggest defence policy overhaul in decades.

Japan holds the 2023 presidency of the G7, and Mr Kishida was to visit bloc members France, Italy, Britain and Canada starting yesterday.

Mr Kishida’s final stop is the United States — his first visit to Washington as prime minister — where he will meet President Joe Biden on Friday.

The talks with Mr Biden would reaffirm US-Japan cooperatio­n and the “realisatio­n of a free and open IndoPacifi­c”, Mr Kishida told reporters on Sunday, using another term for the Asia-Pacific region.

The two leaders are expected to discuss security challenges including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

They are also expected to issue a joint statement that will include Taiwan and the denucleari­sation of North Korea, the Japanese newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun reported, citing unnamed Japanese government sources.

Mr Kishida has said he will discuss his nation’s bolstered defence policy with Mr Biden.

Japan’s government approved a major defence policy overhaul last month, including a significan­t spending hike, as it warned China posed the “greatest strategic challenge ever” to its security.

It was the country’s largest defence shake-up in decades, with the government vowing to increase security spending to 2% of GDP by 2027 and acquire new equipment including advanced missiles.

Japan will host the G7 summit this year.

Mr Kishida said he expects allies from the bloc to reaffirm support for Ukraine, and to also display “solidarity with the rest of the world” on issues such as climate change and the food and energy crises.

“I hope to have candid, heart-toheart talks with my G7 counterpar­ts and further deepen personal relationsh­ips of trust,” he said on Sunday. “It will be important to confirm the basic stance of defending the rule of law and the internatio­nal order based on rules.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Fumio Kishida speaks in Tokyo.
REUTERS Prime Minister Fumio Kishida speaks in Tokyo.

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