Japan's Ishiba hosts South Korea's Lee before key Trump summit
Briefly

Lee Jae Myung visited Tokyo and met Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba to reaffirm security cooperation and showcase friendly ties between South Korea and Japan. They discussed closer security cooperation with the United States under a trilateral pact and agreed to resume shuttle diplomacy. The leaders pledged to expand exchanges including working holiday programmes and to increase cooperation in defence, economic security, and artificial intelligence. Both committed to closer coordination against North Korea's nuclear and missile threats. The visit followed Lee's snap election win and came amid Japanese visits to a war shrine that prompted South Korean government disappointment.
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has hosted South Korean President Lee Jae Myung in Tokyo for a visit aimed at reaffirming security cooperation and showcasing friendly ties between the two East Asian neighbours facing common challenges from their mutual ally, the United States. On his first official visit to Japan since taking office in June, Lee met Ishiba on Saturday at the premier's residence to discuss bilateral ties, including closer security cooperation with the US under a trilateral pact signed by their predecessors.
As the strategic environment surrounding both our countries grows increasingly severe, the importance of our relations, as well as trilateral cooperation with the United States, continues to grow, Ishiba said in a joint announcement with Lee after their meeting. The leaders agreed to resume shuttle diplomacy, expand exchanges such as working holiday programmes, and step up cooperation in defence, economic security, artificial intelligence and other areas. They also pledged closer coordination against North Korea's nuclear and missile threats.
The snap election victory of the liberal Lee following the impeachment of conservative President Yoon Suk Yeol for declaring martial law raised concerns in Tokyo that relations with Seoul could sour. Lee has criticised past efforts to improve ties strained by lingering resentment over Japan's colonial rule. The South Korean government last week expressed deep disappointment and regret after Japanese officials visited a shrine in Tokyo to Japan's war dead that many Koreans see as a symbol of Japan's wartime aggression.
Read at www.aljazeera.com
[
|
]