Google – AFP, 2 November 2013
Tokyo — The
foreign and defence ministers of Japan and Russia agreed Saturday to cooperate
in fighting terrorism and piracy as the neighbours, still at odds over
territorial woes, held an unprecedented security dialogue.
Japan's
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera held a
so-called "2+2" meeting with Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
and Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu at the government's guest house in Tokyo.
It was the
first such diplomatic-defence talks between the two countries, which remain at
odds over the sovereignty of a cluster of windswept islands to Japan's north
and Russia's far east.
During the
one-day meeting, the two sides agreed to carry out joint drills between Japan's
Maritime Self-Defence Force and the Russian Navy designed to combat terrorists
and pirates, the ministers said.
They also
agreed to launch "Japan-Russia cyber-security talks" while stepping
up other security and defence talks, including ministerial meetings, their
joint statement said.
"We
got off to a good start by turning to a new chapter of the Japanese and Russian
relationship," Kishida told a joint news conference.
"Pushing
for cooperation in the security sector will help enhance the entire
relationship between Japan and Russia, which will have a good impact on
negotiations on signing a peace treaty," he said.
Despite an
important commercial relationship that is now much influenced by Japan's need
to buy fossil fuels and Russia's desire to sell them, the two neighbours have
failed to sign a peace treaty due to their territorial dispute.
The
islands, which Japan calls the Northern Territories, but Russia administers as
the Southern Kurils, were seized by Soviet troops as World War II thundered to
a close.
Lavrov said
Saturday's meeting also covered regional concerns, including the Korean
peninsula issue, territorial disputes, drug trafficking and borderless crimes.
"We
confirmed that our close cooperation in settling these issues will meet the
interest of the two countries," the Russian foreign minister said.
But Kishida
stressed that their bilateral dialogue did not intend to single out one
particular issue or a country, adding the Japan-US security alliance is still
the cornerstone of Tokyo's diplomacy.
Four
separate meetings have taken place between Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
and Russian President Vladimir Putin over the past six months, an unusual
frequency for such high-level exchanges.
The affable
tone stands in marked contrast to the the state of relations between Japan and
China.
Asia's two
largest economies are at diplomatic loggerheads over the sovereignty of a chain
of islands in the East China Sea. Chinese President Xi Jinping and Abe have not
met for a formal sit-down since either came to power.
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