Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida visited Kyiv in war-hit Ukraine on Tuesday to meet with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, according to Japan’s Foreign Ministry, just a day after Chinese leader Xi Jinping arrived in Russia.
Kishida will use the visit to convey Japan’s “solidarity and unwavering support for Ukraine” while “resolutely rejecting Russia’s aggression against Ukraine and unilateral changing of the status quo by force.”
The ministry stated that the Japanese leader would also reaffirm his commitment to defending rules-based international law.
Xi Meeting Putin in Russia
The summit between Kishida and Zelenskyy occurs while Xi meets with Putin in Moscow.China and Russia are not in a formal military alliance, but they announced a “no limits” partnership just weeks before Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The ties between China and Russia seem to have increased months after Russian forces entered Ukraine.
The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs has described Xi’s visit to Russia as an effort to promote a peaceful end to the ongoing fighting in Ukraine. But U.S. officials believe his visit will serve a longer-term goal of solidifying a partnership and power alignment with Russia.
Japan’s Support of Ukraine
Japan has strongly condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and imposed a series of sanctions to pressure Moscow to back off. It banned Russian banks from the SWIFT global interbank network, blocked the assets of Putin and several other Russian leaders, and prohibited exports to Russian entities.Due to its pacifist principles, Japan’s support for Ukraine has been limited to non-combative military equipment such as helmets, bulletproof vests, drones, and humanitarian supplies, including generators.
Japan has contributed more than $7 billion to Ukraine, accepted more than 2,000 displaced Ukrainians, and helped them with housing assistance and support to get jobs and education—a rare move for a country known for its strict immigration policy.
In October last year, Zelenskyy signed a decree recognizing Japan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, including the disputed Kuril Islands, which have been under Russian control since 1945.Japan has claimed that the Kuril Islands “have never been held by foreign countries” and that they have been under illegal occupation by Russia and by the former Soviet Union before that since 1945.
The two countries never formally signed a peace treaty due to the dispute. Japan initiated peace talks with Russia that the Kremlin terminated after Japan imposed several sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine war.