San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDEN, JAPAN’S PM MEET AHEAD OF G-7 SUMMIT

Leaders vow to ‘stand strong’ against threats

- BY JOSH BOAK, ZEKE MILLER & MARI YAMAGUCHI Boak, Miller and Yamaguchi write for The Associated Press.

President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida met Thursday aiming to showcase the strength of their alliance ahead of a Group of Seven summit where leading democracie­s will tackle the challenges of Russia’s war in Ukraine, North Korea’s ballistic nuclear threats and an increasing­ly forceful China.

Biden recalled that Kishida said during a January Washington visit that the world faced one of the “most complex” security environmen­ts in recent history.

“I couldn’t agree with you more,” Biden told the Japanese prime minister as they sat with their aides at a conference table. “When our countries stand together, we stand stronger and I believe the whole world is safer when we do.”

Kishida noted that the global tensions had brought the U.S. and Japan closer together, that “the cooperatio­n has evolved in leaps and bounds.”

The Kishida family’s home city of Hiroshima will host the gathering of major industrial­ized nations known at the G-7. The setting of Hiroshima, where the U.S. dropped the first nuclear bomb in 1945 during World War II, carries newfound resonance. Members

of the G-7, which also includes Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and the European Union, are grappling with the territoria­l ambitions of Russia and China, two nuclear powers.

Biden is also appearing on the world stage while trying to manage a divide back in the U.S. on how to raise the government’s debt limit. He opted to cut short what was supposed to be an eightday trip to Asia, so he can return to Washington to try to avoid a potentiall­y catastroph­ic default in June that could ripple across the global economy. It’s a drama that reveals how internal U.S. politics can spill over into global forums.

While aboard Air Force One, Jake Sullivan, the White House national security adviser, told reporters that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine looms large as a G-7 topic. He added leaders would discuss the state of play on the battlefiel­d

and sealing loopholes to strengthen sanctions that have been levied against Moscow.

Last year, Biden came to Tokyo to discuss Indo-Pacific strategy and launch a new trade framework for the region, with the U.S. president and Kishida engaging in an 85-minute tea ceremony and seafood dinner. The president’s first stop in Japan on Thursday was to greet U.S. troops at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, before he headed to Hiroshima for talks with the Japanese prime minister.

Kishida was quick to call out the risks of Russian aggression in 2022, saying then, “Ukraine today could be East Asia tomorrow.”

China has declared a limitless friendship with Russia, increasing trade in ways that blunted the ability of financial sanctions to constrain the war. But the U.S. and its allies say China has yet to ship military equipment to Russia, a sign that the friendship might have some boundaries.

Biden and Kishida also discussed economic matters. They addressed efforts to bolster supply chains for critical minerals, new partnershi­ps between U.S. and Japanese companies and universiti­es and efforts to promote renewable energy, according to a White House readout of the meeting.

Kishida had planned to discuss further strengthen­ing of deterrence and response capability with Biden in the face of China’s assertiven­ess in the Indo-Pacific region, as well as confirming the importance of the Taiwan Strait for global peace and stability. China has said that self-governing Taiwan should come under its rule.

The U.S. and Japanese leaders also talked about ways to reinforce their threeway partnershi­p with South Korea, which signed an agreement in April with the U.S. to strengthen their tools for deterring a nuclear attack by North Korea.

Kishida and Biden will hold a trilateral summit with South Korea’s Yoon Suk Yeol on the sidelines of the G-7 summit. But Kishida is in a complicate­d position by discussing efforts to respond to nuclear threats by North Korea with Japan’s history of also calling for a world free from nuclear arms, said Kan Kimura, a Kobe University professor and an expert on South Korea.

 ?? KIYOSHI OTA AP ?? President Joe Biden shakes hands with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Thursday.
KIYOSHI OTA AP President Joe Biden shakes hands with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Thursday.

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