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REPEAT: Japan's Aso Cancels U.S. Visit Due N. Korea Threat

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 03:11 GMT Sep 1/23:11 EST Aug 31
     TOKYO (MNI) - Japanese Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso has canceled his
planned visit to Washington next week, postponing a preparatory meeting for the
second round of the bilateral economic dialogue to cope with the escalating
threat of missile attacks by North Korea.
     Aso, who is also finance minister, had planned to compare notes on trade
issues with U.S. Vice President Mike Pence at the White House during his visit
starting on Monday, press reports said.
     But Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told Aso to stay in Japan to be able to
respond to any developments in Pyongyang's nuclear weapon and ballistic missile
program while the prime minister is in Vladivostok to meet Russian President
Vladimir Putin, Aso told reporters Friday.
     Aso said the second round of U.S.-Japan economic talks was likely to be
held by the end of the year, sometime after the annual meeting of the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Washington in October,
according to a MOF spokesman.
     At the first meeting of the U.S.-Japan Economic Dialogue in Tokyo in April,
Aso and Pence, as the co-chairs, agreed on three policy pillars: a common
strategy on trade and investment rules and issues; cooperation in economic and
structural policies; and cooperation in certain commercial and industrial
sectors.
     At a joint news conference in April, Pence reiterated that Washington
wanted to seek a bilateral free-trade deal with Tokyo while Aso stressed that
the two economic and military allies had embarked on a new era of cooperation in
trade and investment.
     Japanese officials are wary of opening bilateral trade talks, though,
because they expect the U.S. would demand that Japan open up its agricultural
markets more drastically to imports.
     Aso has said in parliamentary hearings that President Donald Trump, who has
blamed Japan's trade policy for hurting U.S. growth, needed to update his memory
of bilateral trade ties, which he said was stuck in the 1980s. Since then, he
says, Japanese manufacturers have set up many factories in the U.S. and hired
thousands of local workers, particularly in the automotive sector.
     Under the second pillar of cooperation in economic and structural policies,
Aso said the U.S. and Japan would pursue a "three-pronged approach" of mutually
reinforcing fiscal, monetary and structural policies set by the Group of Seven
industrialized nations. They will also coordinate on global economic and
financial developments, he said.
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-4670-5309; email: max.sato@marketnews.com
--MNI BEIJING Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: john.carter@mni-news.com

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