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President Donald Trump gestures as he speaks with Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe last year upon his arrival for a luncheon in Japan
The Japanese prime minister will make his second visit to Trump’s ostentatious Palm Beach, Florida estate, when the focus will be on trade and security.
Last year, Trump and Abe traded fist bumps and high fives as they snuck in a round of golf in Palm Beach and a return leg near Tokyo, tucking into burgers with ketchup for good measure.
“Obviously, the President has got a great relationship there,” said White House press secretary Sarah Sanders looking forward to meetings this Tuesday and Wednesday.
But with Abe’s approval rating languishing at its lowest level in years and Trump mired in controversies and crises too numerous to list, both are under pressure.
“Long-distance relationships are complicated, and the stakes of their second rendezvous at Mar-a-Lago this week are high,” said Mireya Solis of the Brooking Institution.
Trump’s decision to hold an improbable summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un this May or June was announced without consulting Abe. And worse, it was announced by a South Korean official.
Since then Tokyo officials have watched in horror as China and South Korea — an ally, but an uneasy one — take on a more direct hand in influencing the outcome of a nuclear crisis that places Japan’s very existence in question.
Pyongyang frequently lobs test-missiles over the sea of Japan, triggering public warning alerts. The abduction of Japanese citizens by North Korea remains a high profile domestic issue.
– Playing from the rough –
Trump could also do with a political victory — perhaps in the form of opening up trade negotiations with Japan as he seeks to calm an increasingly restless and crisis-weary base.
His recent decision to order air strikes in Syria has soured supporters who believed that his “America First” policies would spell an end to Middle Eastern military intervention.
This comes just weeks after signing a budget that exploded spending — infuriating Republican fiscal hawks — without paying for his much-promised wall along the border with Mexico.
Both decisions may be the result of campaign promises running into reality, but have prompted prominent supporters to balk.
Conservative pundit and longtime cheerleader Ann Coulter went as far as pillorying Trump as a “shallow, lazy ignoramus.”
Amid the tumult, Trump has taken a harder line on his promise to rewrite the global terms of trade in America’s favor.
“It is a well-rehearsed habit of Trump’s to ramp up the rhetoric on trade when he’s in a political pinch, to fire up his base,” said Solis.
Trump has announced billions worth of tariffs on Chinese imports, hit out at what he called European Union protectionism and warned he may walk away from a longstanding trade deal with Mexico and Canada.
“Our country has been taken advantage of for many, many years,” he said at an event in Florida on Monday. “They’re being renegotiated. We’re straightening them out.”
So far Trump has proven flexible about Abe’s reluctance to begin negotiations on a free trade agreement.
But the country’s protectionist agriculture and auto markets could well be Trump’s next target, unless Abe can use his friendship to tee-up a compromise.
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