China will join first Japan, South Korea summit since 2015

Taro Kono, newly-appointed foreign minister of Japan

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang will travel to Tokyo for his country’s first joint summit with Japan and South Korea since 2015, the clearest sign yet of improving ties between the three neighbors.

The meeting was announced as Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono concluded a two-day visit aimed at repairing his country’s strained relationship with China.

Norio Maruyama, a spokesman for the Japanese delegation, said the summit could set the stage for reciprocal visits by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Chinese President Xi Jinping – a trip neither leader has made since coming to power in 2012.

“What we are envisaging is a visit to China by Prime Minister Abe and after that a visit to Japan by President Xi Jinping,” Maruyama said.

A three-way summit would demonstrate not only improvement in ties between Beijing and Tokyo but in their relationships with Seoul, as well. China recently shelved a months-long dispute with South Korea over a U.S. missile shield, and Abe last week announced plans to attend next month’s Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang.

Relations between China and Japan have been frosty since a 2012 crisis over disputed islands in the East China Sea reignited longstanding suspicion between the two World War II foes. Kono – the first Japanese foreign minister to visit China since April 2016 – said the two sides need to work together to deal with issues of global relevance, “in particular the North Korea issue.”

“It is important not only to discuss issues related to the two countries but for Japan and China to stand side by side to deal with global issues,” Kono said.

Kenji Kanasugi, director-general of the Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau at Japan’s foreign ministry, will was meeting Kong Xuanyou, China’s special envoy for Korean affairs, yesterday in Beijing to discuss issues on the Korean peninsula, Japan’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

Kono and his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, exchanged “very frank” views on the East China Sea and reaffirmed their commitments denuclearizing Korean Peninsula and the need to fully implement United Nation sanctions against North Korea, Maruyama said.

The two sides also discussed ways to “improve the business environment” and cooperation in third countries between Japan and China, he said. China is Japan’s biggest trading partner, while Japan is China’s second-largest single-nation partner after the U.S. Trade between the two countries was worth some USD302 billion in 2016, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. MDT/Bloomberg

Categories Asia-Pacific