The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump hugs ally Japan after easing U.S.-China tensions

President seeks more mainstream policy toward Asia.

- By Matthew Pennington

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump, fresh off patching up ties with China, reassured Japan’s leader Friday that the U.S. will defend its close ally. Together, the pronouncem­ents illustrate­d a shift toward a more mainstream Trump stance on U.S. policy toward Asia.

Welcoming Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to the White House with a hug, Trump said he wants to bring the post-World War II alliance with Japan “even closer.” While such calls are ritual after these types of meetings, from Trump they’re sure to calm anxieties that he has stoked by demanding that America’s partners pay more for their own defense.

Abe, a nationalis­t adept at forging relationsh­ips with self-styled strongmen overseas, was the only world leader to meet the Republican before his inaugurati­on. He is now the second to do so since Trump took office. Flattering the billionair­e businessma­n, Abe said he would welcome the United States becoming “even greater.”

He also invited Trump to visit Japan this year. Trump accepted, according to a joint statement.

Other leaders of America’s closest neighbors and allies, such as Mexico, Britain and Australia, have been singed by their encounters or conversati­ons with Trump.

But the optics Friday were positive. After a working lunch on economic issues, the Trump and Abe boarded Air Force One with their wives for a trip to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida. The two leader are scheduled to play golf today.

Their Oval Office meeting came hours after Trump reaffirmed Washington’s long-standing “one China” policy in a call with Chinese President Xi Jinping. That statement will similarly ease anxieties in East Asia after Beijing was angered and other capitals were rattled by earlier suggestion­s that he might use Taiwan as leverage in trade, security and other negotiatio­ns.

Although Japan is a historic rival of China, Trump said that his long and “warm” conversati­on with Xi was good for Tokyo, too.

“I believe that will all work out very well for everybody, China, Japan, the United States and everybody in the region,” Trump said at a joint news conference with Abe.

Stepping carefully into Japan’s longstandi­ng territoria­l dispute with China over uninhabite­d islands in the East China Sea, Trump said the U.S. is committed to the security of Japan and all areas under its administra­tive control. The implicatio­n was that the U.S.-Japan defense treaty covers the disputed islands, which Japan which calls the Senkaku, but China calls the Diaoyu.

Beijing opposes such statements, but Trump’s wording allowed for some diplomatic wiggle room. The joint statement released later was more explicit, however, in spelling out the U.S. commitment.

Abe has championed a more active role for Japan’s military. He has eased constraint­s imposed by the nation’s pacifist post-war constituti­on and allowed forces to defend allies, even if Japan itself is not under attack.

As a candidate, Trump urged even greater self-reliance, at one point even raising the notion of Japan and South Korea developing their own nuclear weapons as a deterrent to North Korea.

He made no similar remark Friday, and according to Japanese officials, did not raise the issue of cost-sharing for defense. Instead he thanked Japan for hosting nearly 50,000 American troops, which also serve as a counterwei­ght to China’s increased regional influence. He said freedom of navigation and dealing with North Korea’s missile and nuclear threats are a “very high priority.”

There was less agreement on economics.

One of Trump’s first actions as president was to withdraw the U.S. from a 12-nation, trans-Pacific trade agreement that was negotiated by the Obama administra­tion and strongly supported by Tokyo.

Diverting from Trump’s stance that the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p is bad for America, Abe stressed the importance of a “free and fair common set of rules” for trade among the world’s most dynamic economies.

“That was the purpose of TPP. That importance has not changed,” Abe said through an interprete­r, though both leaders held out the possibilit­y of a future bilateral, U.S.-Japanese deal.

 ?? MARIO TAMA / GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump greets Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as he arrives Friday at the White House in Washington, D.C. Abe invited Trump to visit Japan this year, and Trump accepted.
MARIO TAMA / GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump greets Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as he arrives Friday at the White House in Washington, D.C. Abe invited Trump to visit Japan this year, and Trump accepted.

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