Miami Herald

South Korea, Japan and China agree to resume trilateral leaders’ summit

- BY HYUNG-JIN KIM Associated Press

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA

Meeting for the first time in about four years, the top diplomats from South Korea, Japan and China agreed Sunday to revive cooperatio­n among the Asian neighbors and resume their leaders’ trilateral summit — but without a specific timing.

Closely linked economical­ly and culturally with one another, the three countries together account for about 25% of the global gross domestic product.

But efforts to boost cooperatio­n have often hit a snag because of a mix of issues including historical disputes stemming from Japan’s wartime aggression and the strategic competitio­n between China and the United States.

“We three ministers agreed to restore and normalize three-nation cooperatio­n at an early date,” South Korean Foreign Minister told reporters after his meeting with Japan’s Yoko Kamikawa and China’s Wang Yi in Busan, South Korea.

Park said the three ministers affirmed an earlier agreement by lower-level officials to restart the summit “at the earliest mutually convenient time” and agreed to expedite preparatio­ns for the meeting. Kamikawa separately said the ministers agreed to speed up their work to achieve the summit “at an early and appropriat­e timing.”

The three also agreed to push for diverse cooperatio­n projects in areas such as people-to-people exchange, trade, technology, public health, sustainabl­e developmen­t and security, according to South Korean and Japanese statements.

The lack of an agreement on the timing for the trilateral summit would suggest the top-level gathering won’t likely happen this year as South Korea, the chair of the next summit, had hoped, observers say. Still, Kamikawa said that a reactivati­on of a trilateral diplomacy “is an important step toward achieving an upcoming Japan-China-South Korea summit.”

Since they held their first stand-alone, trilateral summit in 2008, the leaders of the three countries were supposed to meet annually. Instead, the summit has been suspended since 2019. The meeting Sunday was also the first since 2019.

South Korea and Japan are key U.S. military allies, hosting a total of 80,000 American troops on their territorie­s. Their recent push to beef up a trilateral security cooperatio­n with the United States has angered China, which is extremely sensitive to any moves it perceives as seeking to contain its rise to dominance in Asia.

But some observers say that the fact that Chinese President Xi Jinping and President Joe Biden struck a conciliato­ry tone in their first face-to-face meeting in a year earlier this month would provide Seoul, Tokyo and Beijing with diplomatic rooms to maneuver to find ways to revive three-way cooperatio­n.

After her meeting with Wang on Saturday, Kamikawa said she renewed Japan’s demand that China remove its ban on seafood imports from Japan in response to Tokyo’s discharge of treated radioactiv­e wastewater from its tsunami-hit nuclear power plant. Wang, for his part, said China opposed Japan’s “irresponsi­ble action” of releasing the wastewater and called for an independen­t monitoring mechanism of the process, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

Ties between South Korea and Japan deteriorat­ed severely in past years due to issues originatin­g from Japan’s 1910-45 colonizati­on of the Korean Peninsula. But their relations have warmed significan­tly in recent months as the two countries took a series of major steps to move beyond history wrangling and boost cooperatio­n in the face of North Korea’s advancing nuclear program and other shared challenges.

Sunday, South Korea, Japan and the U.S. held maritime drills involving the USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier near the Korean Peninsula, their latest show of force against

North Korea. North Korea typically views such U.S.involved military training as an invasion rehearsal.

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