Tokyo (AFP) Nov 02, 2013 - 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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