By Andrew Hammond
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Top of the agenda is not just the unraveling U.S.-North Korean talks, but also the potential for finalizing a U.S.-Japan trade deal which Trump and Director of the U.S. National Economic Council Larry Kudlow, remarkably, have said could be finalized by the end of the month, an assessment that seems very optimistic.
The fact that Trump is visiting Japan, so soon before next month's G20, and after the two leaders met only last month in the United States, underlines the relative warmth of Washington-Beijing relations, right now. Abe, in particular, has invested massive personal political capital in the relationship ― even reportedly nominating the U.S. president for the Nobel Peace Prize.
To be sure, Abe's charm offensive has paid some dividends. This includes the energy that is now being put into the U.S.-Japan free trade deal with Kudlow scheduled to be in Tokyo on Friday to try to accelerate the negotiations.
Yet, Japan has also been caught by surprise on several fronts by Trump during his presidency. This includes North Korea where Tokyo was concerned, especially last year, about the speed with which the U.S. president appeared to be pushing forward with talks with Kim Jong-un.
While Abe asserted that Trump showed "courage" in doing so, including the summit in Singapore last year, the prime minister has been wary about where the talks could land. There has been particular anxiety that Tokyo's key interests would be pressed by the president in the talks, including the issue of Japanese nationals abducted in the 1970s and 1980s.
Abe has also been worried that Trump may look to a do a deal with Kim, without taking its broader security interests into account. This included Pyongyang potentially agreeing to give up missiles capable of reaching the United States, without eliminating short- and medium-range missiles that threaten Japan and neighboring countries.
Tensions between the two sides on this issue most recently surfaced this month when the longtime security allies appeared to disagree over Pyongyang's recent launch of short-range ballistic missiles. Tokyo criticized the move as a violation of U.N. resolutions, while Trump said he not believe the moves were a "breach of trust" by Kim.
On the economic front, Abe is pleased with the energy that is being put into the U.S.-Japanese talks, even though he and other Japanese officials are skeptical that the negotiations can be concluded this month. In part, this is because the Washington-Tokyo negotiations come in the context of previous political tensions over the bilateral economic relationship with Trump's often negative comments on the 2016 U.S. president election trail about Japan.
Securing close ties with Washington is important for Abe who is on track to become the longest serving premier in postwar Japanese history. One of the key reasons Abe is keen to be so close to Trump is Japanese concerns about a "rising China" in Asia-Pacific.
The prime minister has particular worries about China's growing influence in the context of the uncertainties that Trump's presidency has brought, including U.S. withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership. This is a trade and investment deal originally intended to lock Washington into deeper economic partnerships with traditional U.S. allies in the region.
In this fluid geopolitical landscape, Abe is seeking to align his long-standing foreign policy plans around Trump's "America first" agenda.
Thus, in a context whereby the president appears to want a more internationally assertive Japan, the prime minister has a long-standing ambition to overturn much of the remaining legal and political underpinning of the country's postwar pacifist security identity so that it can become more externally engaged.
Here is no coincidence that one of the visits Trump may reportedly make during his trip is to a naval base in Yokosuka. This will enable him to see a destroyer that has been retrofitted as what is being depicted as Japan's first postwar aircraft carrier.
One big, specific measure Abe wishes to push for is abolition of Article 9. This is the clause in Japan's postwar constitution which constrains the country's military to a strictly defensive role rather than a conventional army, and has meant that defense spending has most often remained below 1 percent of GDP.
To overturn this, Abe would need not just a two-thirds majority in both chambers of the legislature, but also a simple majority in a national referendum. This could prove a major challenge, however, given the large body of Japanese public opinion which still values its postwar pacifism in the only country in the world to have ever been attacked with nuclear weapons.
Taken overall, Trump's trip therefore represents Abe's latest move to fortify Japan-U.S. alliance in the face of China's rise. He would dearly welcome capping his long period of office off with historic change around the country's postwar pacifism which may enable it to become more internationally engaged, but at the risk of significantly inflaming tensions with Beijing.
Andrew Hammond (andrewkorea@outlook.com) is an associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economic.