The visit by Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is the first major indication of how the Trump administration will handle relations with allies such as Japan and South Korea.
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and U.S. President Donald Trump are expected to affirm that the two nations will beef up their security alliance and widen economic cooperation during their ...
An electronics store in Tokyo has apologized after hundreds of Chinese buyers who flocked there to get their hands on the ...
Trump has long felt that Japan and other wealthy allies take advantage of the U.S., racking up big trade surpluses, while ...
For Japanese companies and investors, deepening ties with Southeast Asia’s dynamic markets is becoming a necessity rather ...
An American professor and a Japanese author, speaking to reporters Friday in Tokyo, said their nations should take a less ...
Shigeru Ishiba, a former minister of defense and a "gunji otaku", or military geek, has long advocated for an enhanced ...
U.S. President Donald Trump meets Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba for the first time on Friday as two allies wary of ...
Wang Fujiyama oversees Associated Press coverage across China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Mongolia. Previously she was a video journalist in Beijing and Tokyo.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba will go to the White House to try to rekindle Japan’s relationship with President Donald Trump ...
Although Japan has so far not been slapped with punitive tariffs, major Japanese companies, especially in the automobile sector, are worried as they either have factories in Canada or rely on Mexico ...