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This Week in AsiaPolitics

Why Japan’s Russia outreach could fuel G7 concern over unity: ‘bad signal’

Energy needs have driven Tokyo to explore cooperation with Moscow again, which could make Europe ‘uncomfortable’

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Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi listens to a question in the House of Councillors budget committee session at the National Diet in Tokyo on June 5. Photo: AFP
Julian Ryall
As Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi heads to the G7 meeting in France next week, she is expected to hear rumblings of discontent over Tokyo’s apparent diplomatic outreach to Moscow.

With European Union member states and most Nato nations united in their resolve to push back on Russia’s ongoing aggression against Ukraine and isolate Moscow, Japan’s very different approach to Vladimir Putin’s regime has not been overlooked.

Senior officials from Japan’s foreign and trade ministries travelled to Moscow for a two-day visit in May and held talks with their Russian counterparts, with representatives from the Japan Business Federation also present. Five of Japan’s largest business conglomerates were also invited but none joined the mission.
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Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi dismissed criticism of Tokyo’s outreach to Moscow, saying it was important to maintain contact even in times of conflict.

European governments will also have noted that Muneo Suzuki, a politician from the ruling Liberal Democratic Party in Hokkaido, has been attempting to arrange a meeting between the foreign ministers of Japan and Russia in July and was in Moscow for discussions last month.

A tanker in waters off Imabari, Japan’s Ehime prefecture, carrying crude oil produced from the Sakhalin 2 oil and natural gas development project in the Russian Far East. Photo: Kyodo
A tanker in waters off Imabari, Japan’s Ehime prefecture, carrying crude oil produced from the Sakhalin 2 oil and natural gas development project in the Russian Far East. Photo: Kyodo

Local media reported on Thursday that Japan was close to reaching an agreement with the US to extend an exemption that would allow Tokyo to continue importing crude oil and liquefied natural gas from Russia’s Sakhalin 2 project. With the conflict in the Middle East flaring up again, Japan is desperate to continue importing Russian energy.

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