Japan's new premier Shinzo Abe will meet U.S. President Barack Obama this week for the first time since taking power, seeking to breathe new life into a key alliance at a time of heightened tensions across Asia.
Abe will be keen to get the reassurance of strong U.S. support on a visit to Washington that comes amid an escalating row with China over disputed islands, and in the same month that North Korea carried out its third nuclear test.
While Abe is the fifth Japanese premier that Obama will have met as U.S. president, he has struck a starkly different tone to his predecessors, pledging to make the alliance his top foreign policy priority.
In an interview with The Washington Post before the trip, Abe said that a tighter alliance with the United States would send a message to Beijing in a tense row over islands in the East China Sea.
"It is important for us to have them recognise that it is impossible to try to get their way by coercion or intimidation," Abe said.
"In that regard, the Japan-U.S. alliance, as well as the U.S. presence, would be critical."
Territorial tensions spiked in September when Tokyo nationalized some of the disputed chain, setting off huge protests across China and a consumer boycott of Japanese brands that hurt exporters as Abe's government tries to stoke growth in the world's third-largest economy.
"Top on their agenda will be to reaffirm the Japan-U.S. alliance that was badly strained by DPJ administrations," said Tomoaki Iwai, political science professor at Nihon University, referring to the now-ousted Democratic Party of Japan, which ruled for three years.
Washington insiders say the White House will be continuing to urge cool heads over the Tokyo-controlled Senkakus, which Beijing claims as the Diaoyus, in the hope the neighbours can find some way to pull back from their zero-sum game of diplomatic jockeying.
Abe, whose Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) swept to victory in December, has in mind a plan to boost military cooperation across the Pacific.
He has long argued that Japan needs to reinterpret its pacifist constitution to permit "collective defense", and allow its soldiers to use force to protect U.S. troops in need, Iwai of Nihon University said.
Japan's leaders have traditionally only allowed Japanese soldiers the right to self-defense, even if that means leaving U.S. counterparts in danger on the same battlefield.
Abe's slant on the issue is welcomed by many in Washington, who have long called for Japan to pull more of its own weight in a very one-sided security alliance.
The allies are keen to work together in the international response to North Korea's nuclear and missile provocations.
But the global community needs Beijing onside and the still-churning spat over the ownership of the disputed archipelago, which has seen Chinese and Japanese battleships eyeing each other up, is something of a distraction.
Also on the agenda will be Japanese purchases of shale gas and the Trans Pacific Partnership (TTP), a huge free trade project Washington is driving, which it wants Tokyo involved in, despite the objections from Japan's powerful and cosseted farming lobby.
Abe's hands are tied somewhat as he faces crucial upper house elections in July that he must win if he is to have the momentum to drive through any substantial reforms.
Elsewhere, the Americans would also like progress on Japan's ratification of the Hague Convention, a treaty aimed at returning children abducted by one parent who flees abroad after the breakdown of an international marriage.
Japan is the only major industrialized nation that has not signed the 1980 convention, despite years of promises.
But, say diplomatic sources, any agreements will remain firmly behind closed doors.
"There will be no big take away from this," said one diplomat. "It's going to be a chance for the two men to get acquainted."
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