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Diplomatic setting representing the Japan-North Korea summit push
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PM Takaichi Sanae’s Bold Gamble: Will the Japan-North Korea Summit Happen in 2025?

2 min readSource

Japanese PM Takaichi Sanae is pushing for a historic Japan-North Korea summit. We analyze the diplomatic moves, including the abduction issue and cooperation with South Korea.

The door's locked, but Tokyo is still knocking. PM Takaichi Sanae is signaling a major shift in Japan's diplomatic strategy toward North Korea. As of December 28, while Narita Airport faces its peak New Year travel rush, the Japanese cabinet is focused on a much more complex journey: re-opening a dialogue with Pyongyang that has been frozen for over two decades.

Takaichi Sanae Japan-North Korea Summit Ambitions

On December 6, PM Takaichi expressed a strong desire for a summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. While critics argue that the path forward remains foggy, the administration isn't sitting idle. They've launched a multi-layered campaign to bring the Abduction Issue back into the spotlight. This includes releasing educational videos on YouTube on December 14 to engage a younger generation often disconnected from this decades-old humanitarian crisis.

We've agreed to coordinate closely on North Korea-related issues to ensure regional stability.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Kihara Seiji

The Seoul-Tokyo Connection

Tokyo knows it can't go at this alone. On December 23, Chief Cabinet Secretary Kihara Seiji met with South Korea's National Security Director. The meeting's primary takeaway was a commitment to airtight cooperation. This trilateral alignment with Washington is the foundation upon which Takaichi hopes to build a breakthrough.

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