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Biden’s ‘historic’ Asia summit confronts an old foe: History

U.S. President Joe Biden’s summit Friday with the leaders of Japan and South Korea could set the stage for a more secure and free Pacific region while revitalizing America’s Asia presence. But the question will be whether the summit – hailed by the White House as a “historic first” intending to “institutionalize” relations among the three countries – can fulfill its promise.

If “the spirit and letter of this summit live on … post-Biden, then this really is historic – for Asia, but also in solidifying that the U.S. continues to be a broker of peace and international cooperation in the world,” says Shihoko Goto at the Wilson Center in Washington.

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A summit between the United States, Japan, and South Korea sought to institutionalize the trilateral relationship. But the relations must overcome several sources of distrust: in Asia of U.S. staying power, in China toward the three allies, and in South Korea of Japan.

But are Koreans, and the Japanese, ready to turn away from the past and focus on the future?

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, who has agreed to drop a number of reparations demands related to forced labor during the Japanese occupation, is credited by U.S. officials with rekindling efforts at entente with Japan since taking office.

The Yoon Japan policy “is a very top-down approach to diplomatic relations, but what is less certain is whether, at the grassroots level, there is also movement forward,” says Ms. Goto. “These sensitive wartime grievances may have been shelved, but they haven’t been solved.”

President Joe Biden’s trilateral summit held at Camp David Friday with the leaders of Japan and South Korea could set the stage for a more secure and free Pacific region, while revitalizing America’s Asia presence at a time when many have concluded it is waning.

Indeed, “The Camp David Summit” has the potential to become shorthand for a watershed moment for East Asian security and diplomatic relations, some U.S. officials and regional experts say, in a way similar to how “Camp David Accords” captured a key moment of progress in Middle East peace.

But the question going forward will be whether the one-day summit – hailed by the White House as a “historic first” intending to “institutionalize” deepening relations among the three countries – can live up to its promise.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

A summit between the United States, Japan, and South Korea sought to institutionalize the trilateral relationship. But the relations must overcome several sources of distrust: in Asia of U.S. staying power, in China toward the three allies, and in South Korea of Japan.

“The word that’s been bandied about by the Biden administration and others is ‘historic,’ that this was the first time President Biden was hosting foreign leaders at Camp David, that this was a pivotal moment in assuring that [Japan and South Korea] will continue to be much more forward-looking together,” says Shihoko Goto, director for geoeconomics and Indo-Pacific enterprise at the Wilson Center in Washington.

“The big test will be if, no matter what election results we have in coming years, the spirit and letter of this summit live on. If this survives post-Biden,” she adds, “then this really is historic – for Asia, but also in solidifying that the U.S. continues to be a broker of peace and international cooperation in the world.”

If one is to assess the question of the summit’s promise simply by the concrete steps agreed to by Mr. Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio, and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, the answer might seem to be a slam-dunk “Yes.”

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