With hand on heart, Donald Trump listened while Japanâs Self-Defense Forces band belted out the Star-Spangled Banner, before the U.S. President joined Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to inspect an honor guard in front of Tokyoâs neo-Baroque Akasaka Palace. It was yet another red carpet privilege bestowed on the former reality television star, whose susceptibility to flattery will be mercilessly probed throughout his 12-day, five-nation Asian tour.
Yet it bodes ill for regional leaders looking to ingratiate themselves to Trump that his patience is already wavering on this, his first stop. Invited by Abe to take part in a traditional koi carp feeding ceremony, Trump flung big clumps at the fish before emptying his whole box of pellets into the water. Still, the two leaders emerged from a series of bilateral meetings singing each otherâs praises and vowing a united front to counter North Korean aggression.
âThere has never been such a close relationship between the leaders of two countries,â Trump said, describing Japan as âa very special place.â He added that both men were âworking to counter the dangerous aggression of the regime in North Korea,â which he called âa threat to the civilized world.â
âThe era of strategic patience is over,â he said. âSome say my rhetoric is strong, but look whatâs happened with weak rhetoric over the past 25 years.â
It was a job well done for Abe, who had gone to enormous lengths to cement a rosy bilateral relationship. Upon Trumpâs arrival, Abe presented him with white baseball hats bearing the slogan âDonald & Shinzo Make Alliance Even Greaterâ in a nod to Trumpâs âMake America Great Againâ campaign slogan. Given Trumpâs aversion to sushi, the two leaders supped on hamburgers made with American beef â shunning Japanâs own wagyu variety, considered among the best in the world â although they did enjoy a traditional Japanese dinner with the first ladies later Sunday evening.
Trump maybe a political neophyte, but his host is a wily operator. He was the first world leader to meet Trump after his election victory and did again shortly after he took office. Exploiting a shared love of golf, Abe presented Trump with a $3,500 gold-plated driver in November, and they played nine holes with top Japanese pro Hideki Matsuyama under clear blue skies at Kasumigaseki Country Club just hours after Trump touched down on Sunday. âI believe there has never been as close bondsâ between the two nations, Abe told journalists after their bilateral meeting Monday, hailing âthe unshakable Japan-U.S. alliance.â
Japanese unease over Trumpâs handling of East Asiaâs metastasizing security situation was a key fact that allowed Abe to bounce back from seemingly untenable doldrums earlier this year following a series of corruption scandals. Abeâs bromance with Trump, compounded by an opposition in meltdown, convinced voters that he was the best candidate to chart the worldâs third biggest economy forward, despite a woeful personal approval rating. Abe returned to power after Oct. 22 snap elections with a two-thirds legislative âsupermajorityâ and is on course to become Japanâs longest-serving postwar Prime Minister. North Koreaâs belligerence and Trumpâs questioning of the East Asian alliance early in his term also helped push Abeâs signature policy goals of reforming Japanâs U.S.-drafted pacifist constitution. There is also growing, if still fringe, talk of developing its own nuclear weapons.
But while Abeâs coddling of Trump is self-serving, leaders across the region appreciate his efforts at schooling the U.S. President on the nitty-gritty of regional diplomacy. âAbe is trying to convince Trump that America is better off pursuing multilateral approaches to Asia that strengthens America, in terms of dealing with Chinaâs hegemonic regional ambitions,â Prof. Jeffery Kingston, a director of Asian Studies at Temple University in Japan. âWashington is punching way below its weight in the region due to policy drift under Trump.â
Still, the leaders have some way to go on the issue of trade. Japan has become the chief proponent of the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) free trade pact after Trump nixed American involvement on his first day in office. Trump wants a bilateral free trade deal with Japan, which has a $68.9 billion trade surplus with the U.S. During the election campaign he slammed Japan and South Korea for not sharing enough of the financial burden for Americaâs military presence. He then accused Japan of being a currency manipulator â a charge he has also leveled at China.
Speaking to business leaders Monday morning, Trump said, âWe want fair and open trade but right now our trade with Japan is not fair and itâs not open.â
So it makes sense for Abe to guide discussion toward North Korea, whose escalating nuclear and missile tests are a growing worry in Japan. North Korea lobbed two missiles over Japanâs northern island of Hokkaido in late September and early October, and defense drills are now part of local preparedness training. âNow is not the time for dialogue but applying maximum pressure on North Korea,â said Abe, who introduced Trump to the families of Japanese abducted by the North Korean regime.
âThey were used to learn the language, they were used for many different reasons,â said Trump. âItâs a tremendous disgrace. Iâve met some really wonderful people who have gone through a lot.â
Trump also expressed condolences for the victims of Sundayâs mass shooting at a church in a rural South Texas that claimed 26 lives, which he described as âan act of evil.â Asked whether it was time to consider stricter gun control, Trump replied that âMental health is your problem here.â
âWe have a lot of mental health problems. This isnât a guns situation,â he said. âThankfully someone else had a gun shooting in the other direction,â he added, saying that otherwise the tragedy would have been much worse.
The electricity tariff will be reduced by 20% from midnight today, the Public Utilities Commission…
A Pakistani court on Friday sentenced the country’s already-imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan and…
Former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa arrived at the CID a short while ago to record a…
Three employees of Parliament who were found guilty of sexual harassment on female staff of…
Despite past criticisms, the government led by the National People’s Power (NPP) has taken steps…
United Petroleum, the Australian energy giant that made a high profile-entry into Sri Lanka’s fuel…