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Japan, Russia agree on economic ties; stalemate on territory

Russia and Japan today agreed to hold talks on joint economic development on four islands at the center of a decades-old territorial dispute between the countries.

It was a small step forward that fell far short of breaking the stalemate in a dispute that has prevented Russia and Japan from signing a peace treaty formally ending World War II.

Joint development “would help foster trust toward a peace treaty,” Russian President Vladimir Putin said at a news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe after meetings in Japan over two days. Asked about developments in Syria, Putin said that he and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan are working to launch a new round of peace talks in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan.

For Putin, the summit meeting marked his first official visit to a G-7 country since Russia annexed Crimea in 2014.

Abe, eager for progress on the territorial issue, invited Putin even though Japan and the other G-7 nations still have sanctions on Russia.

The dispute centers on four southern Kuril islands, which Japan calls the Northern Territories. The Soviet Union took the islands in the closing days of World War II, expelling 17,000 Japanese to nearby Hokkaido, the northernmost of Japan’s four main islands.

Abe said today that he has his justice, and Putin, his own.

“If we just insist on our own justice, we can never resolve the problem,” he said. “We must make an effort to open a new future in Japan-Russia relations for the new generation.” 

Putin said he did not know how the dispute could be resolved, but he said the islands should be seen not as a point of contention point but “a place that brings Japan and Russia together.” Former island resident Koiichi Iwata, 87, told Japanese public broadcaster NHK that change won’t come easily.

“We are different people. We lost the war, and we feel that we were taken advantage of,” he said. “But there is hope.

They say win-win, which means that is good for both peoples, right?” 

An agreement on joint economic development is far from a given, because of the dispute over sovereignty. Russia says that any development should be governed by Russian laws, while Japan is pushing for a special framework that in Abe’s words would not “infringe the sovereignty positions of either side.” “It’s a huge problem,” said James Brown, a Japan-Russia expert at Temple University’s Japan campus in Tokyo. “There is every chance it will never happen.” 
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