Barack
Obama has welcomed Shinzo Abe to the White House for a rare official visit. The
US president and Japanese prime minister were greeted with cheers by school
children waving flags of their two countries.
Obama is
hosting Abe during a visit to showcase deeper defense ties and advance a
Pacific trade pact as the two allies seek to counter China's growing power inAsia. On Tuesday, the president and first lady Michelle Obama received the
Japanese prime minister and his wife, Akie Abe, in a formal ceremony on the
South Lawn of the White House, complete with a gun salute and review of troops.
"Today
is also a chance for Americans, especially our young people, to say thank you
for all the things we love from Japan: like karate and karaoke, manga and
anime, and, of course, emojis," Obama said to laughter from the crowd of
schoolchildren.
Abe said he
had made revitalizing the US-Japan relationship "the top priority of my
foreign policy" and that it had grown "more robust than ever."
The prime minister added that the TPP and the realignment of US forces in Japan
remained on the agenda. The leaders planned to hold bilateral talks in the Oval
Office ahead of a joint press conference and a state dinner in the evening.
'Swift and
successful'
When Abe
becomes the first Japanese premier to address a joint session of the US
Congress on Wednesday, many expect him to urge lawmakers to advance
trade-promotion authority and eventually approve the TPP. In the latest effort
by the United States to shift the balance of economic power in Asia from China,
US officials have enthusiastically engaged 11 nations in the region on the
pact.
"We
welcome the significant progress that has been made in the bilateral
negotiations and reaffirm our commitment to work together to achieve a swift
and successful conclusion to the broader agreement," the two governments
announced in a joint "vision statement."
PM Abe & President Obama issued Joint Vision Statement, Fact Sheet on Japan-US Cooperation, Joint Statement on NPT http://t.co/Cr8FMOt6Qt
— Japan Embassy DC (@JapanEmbDC) 28 april 2015
Obama has
had trouble winning over some fellow Democrats who oppose the TPP, which would
cover a third of world trade, on environmental, labor and human rights grounds.
Differences remain between US and Japanese officials over autos and
agriculture.
Abe and
Obama have had success with new defense cooperation guidelines, the first
update in 18 years as Japan expands its foreign military presence. In New York
on Monday, US Secretary of State John Kerry and Defense Secretary Ashton Carter
met their Japanese counterparts, Fumio Kishida and Gen Nakatani, respectively,
to finalize language on ways to boost their alliance through greater military
cooperation.
Japan has
had a host of economic and foreign relations problems lately. On Monday, Fitch
cut the country's credit rating. And leaders in Asia have espressed discomfort
with a shrine to Japan's World War Two dead.
mkg/bw (Reuters, AFP, dpa, AP)

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