June 15, 2005
Russia: Putin Seeks Breakthrough Agreement With Japan
by Robert Parsons
Putin (left) with Toyota Chairman Okuda at the St. Petersburg plant's foundation-stone ceremony on 14 June
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Russian President Vladimir Putin says he wants to visit Japan in November and that he hopes to use the visit to conclude a peace treaty with Tokyo, formally concluding Second World War hostilities between the two countries. But so far any agreement has been held up by a territorial dispute over four islands, known as the southern Kuriles by Russia and as the Northern Territories by Japan. They were seized by the Soviet Union from Japan at the end of the war. RFE/RL looks at whether a deal may be in the offing.
Prague, 15 June 2005 (RFE/RL) -- They are, indisputably, one of the more bizarre consequences of a war that ended fully sixty years ago. Four cold, rocky, disconsolate islands almost constantly wreathed in mist.
Yet Etorofu, Kunashiri, Shikotan, and Habomai are the reason why, at the start of the 21st century, Russia and Japan are still technically in a state of war with each other.
For nationalists in both countries, there can be no compromise. In Japan, in particular, there has been a cross-party political consensus on the issue: the islands are Japanese and must be returned. But there are growing signs that both Moscow and Tokyo might be ready to make concessions to put the past behind them.
Russian President Vladimir Putin told former Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori in St. Petersburg yesterday that he would like to visit Japan in November. According to the Japanese newspaper "Asahi," Putin also said Russia supports Japan's efforts to acquire a permanent seat on the UN Security Council.
The two men were in St. Petersburg to attend the opening of a giant new Toyota assembly plant, a high point in Japanese investment in Russia. By being there, Putin indicated the importance he attaches to Russo-Japanese ties.