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Leaders pledge to stand against the Chinese “aggression”, and announce a compromise on the Nippon Steel-Steel deal.
Japanese Prime Minister Shigro Eshiba and US President Donald Trump struck a warm tone at their first meeting, where Tokyo avoided the customs tariff that Trump slapped on other allies – at the present time.
The praise of each other extends to each other in the White House, the two leaders pledged on Friday to stand together against the Chinese “aggression” and said they found a solution to a deal preserved on the troubled American steel.
However, Trump pressed Ishiba to reduce the US trade deficit with Japan to scratch and warned that Tokyo still can face definitions on exported goods if it fails.
Ishiba, a fan of “obsessive” and “typans”, was put pressure on Trump’s close relationship with the former Prime Minister and Body Golf, Shinzo Abe.
Both leaders insisted that they had only shocked a relationship during the second visit by a new foreign leader.
“I was very excited to see such celebrities on television personally,” Ishia told her joint press conference – while he says he is not trying to “absorb.”
“On television, he is scary and has a very strong personality. But when I met him, in fact, he was very honest and very strong.”
While they exchanged photos, Trump praised the 68-year-old Japanese Prime Minister as “good-looking”-usually one of the highest praise orders on reality TV.
The US president laughed and said, “This is a very good answer,” when Ishia said he could not respond to a “theoretical question” about whether he would take revenge on any American tariff.
Meanwhile, Trump said that Nippon Steel in Japan will make a major investment in the United States, but does not take over the troubled company as has already been negotiated.
“They will see an investment instead of a purchase,” Trump said. His predecessor Joe Biden has prevented the deal.
The two leaders have also doubled in the United States’ relations for decades in security and trade-despite fears that Trump can operate Tokyo as he has with other US allies.
Trump said they agreed to fight the “Chinese economic aggression”, and in a joint statement, Beijing condemned “provocative activities” in the disputed South China Sea.
They also called for North Korea, although Trump – who met his leader Kim Jong Un during his first term – said he wanted “relationships” with Pyongyang.
Behind Trump’s expressions of support were Japan’s promises to invest a trillion dollars in the United States and enhance Japanese defense equipment.
Ishiba said his country was the largest investor in the United States and would climb its spending.
Ishiba, who smokes cigarettes, who smokes cigarettes to Washington, hurried to knock on the edge of Trump’s “first” policies.
During the era of Abe, Japan was protected from some of the most punished Trump tendencies, such as sudden commercial wars and pressure to increase financial contributions to hosting American soldiers.
Days after Trump’s first victory in the elections, Abe rushed to connect him with a gold -plated golf club. Trump also hosted Aki’s widow for dinner in his resort in Mar Lago in Florida last December.
So far, the US President slapped the definitions of China and their order to Mexico and Canada before stopping them for a month.
He also pledged definitions to the European Union and said on Friday that he would announce an “mutual tariff” next week.