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Reluctant Abe says US, Japan to start talks on ‘trade deals’

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Palm Beach: Facing US pressure, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said that Tokyo was ready to begin talks about “trade deals” with the United States, but was careful not to commit to a bilateral deal. After rising demands for fairer trade from his US host President Donald Trump, Abe said on Wednesday “we have agreed to start talks for free, fair and reciprocal trade deals.”


But he would not be drawn on whether that path would lead to a US-Japan pact, or a broader trans-Pacific pact, which Trump currently opposes.


Abe said aides would discuss possible solutions and report back, buying some time to bring Trump back on side with the so-called Trans-Pacific Partnership — a regional agreement inked by Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama.


Trump would like to see a bilateral deal that is likely to much more sharply target sensitive political issues for Tokyo — including access to agricultural and auto markets.


And Trump notably did not exempt Japan from steel and aluminium tariffs, as he did for Washington’s other allies and partners.


On aluminium, Abe insisted: “Japan’s steel and aluminium industries are contributing massively to US industries and jobs, without being a threat to US security.”


The US president has repeatedly seen trade as a zero-sum game, with trade deficits — like the $60-plus billion deficit with Japan — being bad and trade surpluses being good.


Skeptical of multilateral institutions and agreements, the Republican businessman-turned-president has preferred a trade strategy of divide and conquer, although that has yet to bear fruit.


“The media has not covered the TPP correctly,” Trump complained, standing next to Abe after their talks in Florida.


“I don’t want to go back into TPP, but if they offered us a deal that I can’t refuse on behalf of the United States, I would do it.”


“But I like bilateral better. I think it’s better for our country. I think it’s better for our workers and I much would prefer a bilateral deal.”


Abe meanwhile said: “We think the TPP is best for Japan and the US, and we’ll have talks with this idea in mind.”


For months, Abe has repelled Trump’s demands to start bilateral talks, but the dispute spilled into public earlier on Wednesday.


During an earlier sit-down meeting, Trump issued a blunt face-to-face challenge to Abe in full view of the cameras, demanding more favourable terms on trade.


“As the prime minister knows, they have done very well with the United States. We have a very big deficit,” Trump said as they sat across the table from each other at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago retreat in Florida. — AFP


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