BSS
  23 May 2022, 10:01

Biden reinforces Japan ties, unveils Asia trade initiative

TOKYO, May 23, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - President Joe Biden met Japanese Prime

Minister Fumio Kishida in Tokyo ahead of the unveiling of a multinational
trade initiative Monday as part of his push to reinvigorate US strategic
power across Asia.

Fresh from a three-day visit to another key US ally, South Korea, Biden
praised Tokyo as a "key global leader" for joining US-led pressure on Russia
over its invasion of Ukraine.

"The US-Japanese alliance has long been a cornerstone of peace and prosperity
in the Indo-Pacific and the United States remains fully committed to Japan's
defence," Biden said after discussions with Kishida.

"We will face the challenges today and in the future together."

US officials describe Japan and South Korea as linchpins in Washington's
pushback against rising Chinese commercial and military power, as well as
partners in a Western-led alliance to isolate Russia over its invasion of
Ukraine.

Washington is keen to show it has not been distracted by the Ukraine crisis,
and Kishida welcomed Biden's visit despite the ongoing war.

"Your visit to Japan at this time illustrates that whatever the situation is,
the United States will continue to strengthen its engagement in the Indo-
Pacific region," the Japanese leader said.

- North Korea ignores Biden -

Hanging over every step of Biden's Asia tour is fear that unpredictable North
Korea will test a nuclear-capable missile or a bomb.

Speculation that this might even happen while Biden was just across the
border in Seoul did not materialise over the weekend.

But US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan told reporters that the threat
remains and said that the dictatorship has a choice.

"If North Korea acts, we'll be prepared to respond. If North Korea doesn't
act, North Korea has the opportunity, as we've said repeatedly, to come to
the table," he said.

Pyongyang has so far declined to answer the United States' appeals for
dialogue, officials say, even ignoring offers of help to combat a sudden mass
outbreak of Covid-19, according to Biden.

The situation will be on the agenda for the Biden-Kishida talks, the White
House said, as well as their "shared vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific"
-- US diplomatic code for maintaining the status quo with a rising China.

The pair are expected to make a statement on the need for "stability" in the
Taiwan Strait, as concern rises about Chinese pressure on the island.

And in a sign of Japan's worry about regional tensions, Kishida is expected
to announce plans for increased defence spending, a sensitive issue in a
country whose constitution limits the military to defence.

- Trade initiative -

After holding a joint press conference with Kishida, Biden will unveil a
long-awaited trade initiative -- also meant to cement the US presence in the
region -- dubbed the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity, or IPEF.

IPEF is being touted by Washington as a framework for what will ultimately
become a tight-knit group of trading nations.

Unlike traditional trade blocs there is no plan for IPEF members to negotiate
tariffs and ease market access -- a tool that has become increasingly
unpopular among American voters fearful of undermining domestic
manufacturing.

Instead, the programme foresees integrating the trading partners with agreed
standards in four main areas: the digital economy, supply chains, clean
energy infrastructure and anti-corruption measures.

The White House has so far been tight-lipped about how many countries are
signing up and it faces questions over how agreed standards of behaviour
between the partners can be enforced.

However, there is no political appetite within the United States for
returning to a binding Asian trade deal following Trump's 2017 withdrawal
from the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

That huge trading bloc was revived, without US membership, in 2018 as the
Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership.


On Tuesday, Biden will be reinforcing the theme of American leadership in the
Asia-Pacific by joining the prime ministers of Australia, India and Japan for
a summit of the Quad group.