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This Week in AsiaPolitics

Trump’s Pearl Harbour joke falls flat in Japan over his ‘disrespectful remarks’

As Japan faces pressure over the Iran war, some observers commend Takaichi for steering her meeting with Trump towards trade deals

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Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi raises her fist while delivering remarks during a dinner hosted by US President Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday. Photo: Reuters
Julian Ryall
People across Japan have recoiled in shock over US President Donald Trump’s joke about the attack on Pearl Harbour in the presence of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in the White House, perceiving the incident as an insult to a long-time ally of Washington.

The Japanese leader won some approval at home for her measured response even as she stiffened visibly over Trump’s comments at the joint press conference in the Oval Office on Thursday.

Addressing a question from a Japanese reporter about Washington’s failure to tell its allies before its February 28 attack on Iran, Trump had quipped: “We wanted a surprise. Who knows better about surprises than Japan. Why didn’t you tell me about Pearl Harbour?”

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He was referring to the surprise attack by the Japanese military on the American naval base in Hawaii on December 7, 1941, which prompted the US to declare war on Tokyo and enter World War II the following day.

The meeting between the two leaders came at a sensitive juncture in bilateral relations amid the ongoing war by the US and Israel against Iran, with Japan and other economies looking to cushion the shock of surging oil prices after attacks targeting energy infrastructure across the Middle East.
US President Donald Trump (right) and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi at the White House Thursday. Photo: Kyodo
US President Donald Trump (right) and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi at the White House Thursday. Photo: Kyodo

Trump earlier called on Japan and other allies to play a part in escorting ships in the Strait of Hormuz, as Iran threatens to choke off maritime passage in the vital waterways, where about 20 per cent of the world’s oil and LNG passes through. Almost 90 per cent of Japanese respondents in recent surveys are strongly opposed to Tokyo’s military involvement in the conflict.

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