San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDEN, JAPAN’S PM HOLD FIRST FORMAL TALKS

China, nuclear weapons, economic ties discussed

- BY MARI YAMAGUCHI & AAMER MADHANI Yamaguchi and Madhani write for The Associated Press.

President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Friday used their first formal meeting to discuss concerns about China’s growing military assertiven­ess that’s causing increasing disquiet in the Pacific.

Kishida said the two leaders spent a “significan­t amount” of their 80-minute call on issues surroundin­g China, including shared concerns about China’s increasing aggression toward Taiwan. China claims self-governing Taiwan as its own territory, to be annexed by force if necessary. In recent months, China has stepped up military exercises near Taiwan, frequently sending warplanes near the island’s airspace.

Biden and Kishida also discussed the situations in Hong Kong and China’s Xinjiang province. Biden has repeatedly called out Beijing over its crackdown on democracy activists in Hong Kong and forced labor practices targeting China’s Uyghur Muslims and other ethnic minorities in Xinjiang.

“President Biden and I were able to exchange views frankly, in a very calm and quiet manner, about how

Japan and the United States together cooperate and lead the internatio­nal society, which I believe will lead to further strengthen­ing of the Japan-U.S. alliance,” Kishida said after the meeting.

The White House said the leaders also spoke about opportunit­ies to enhance economic ties between the two nations, launching a new “2 plus 2” dialogue focused on addressing economic issues, ranging from supply chain challenges and investment in key technologi­es to further cooperatio­n on trade issues. Japan also expressed support for the Biden administra­tion’s proposed Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, and pledged to work to build support for the initiative in the region.

Biden accepted Kishida’s invitation to visit Japan later this spring for an official visit and to attend this year’s

Quad Summit, the meeting held between the leaders of Japan, the United States, Australia and India.

Japan remains concerned about China’s intentions in the South China Sea, where it has stepped up its military presence in recent years, and the East China Sea, where there is a long-running dispute about a group of uninhabite­d islets administer­ed by Tokyo but claimed by Beijing.

Kishida said after the meeting that he expressed his determinat­ion to drasticall­y strengthen Japan’s defense power while Biden spoke of the U.S. commitment to abiding by the 1960 Japan-U.S. security treaty and made it clear it covers the Japanese-controlled disputed islands of Senkaku, which China refers to as Diaoyu.

Later, Japanese Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Seiji

Kihara said Kishida explained his commitment to strengthen­ing Japan’s military capability, saying the prime minister would consider “all options including acquiring preemptive strike capability.”

The virtual meeting came after North Korea this week suggested it might resume nuclear and long-range missile testing, which has been paused for more than three years.

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un on Thursday presided over a Politburo meeting of the ruling Workers’ Party at which officials set policy goals for “immediatel­y bolstering” military capabiliti­es to counter what were described as the Americans’ “hostile moves,” according to the Korean Central News Agency.

The White House said Biden made clear to Kishida that the U.S. would work closely with South Korea and Japan on next steps to discourage North Korea from further provocatio­n. The Biden administra­tion expects to announce further steps to address North Korea in the coming days, according to a senior administra­tion official.

Kishida, who is from Hiroshima, on which the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb at the end of the World War II, said he raised to Biden concerns about nuclear security and the idea of achieving “a world without nuclear weapons.”

 ?? ADAM SCHULTZ WHITE HOUSE VIA AP ?? President Joe Biden meets virtually with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Friday.
ADAM SCHULTZ WHITE HOUSE VIA AP President Joe Biden meets virtually with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Friday.

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