Asia

Tokyo Reaffirs Position on Kurils Despite New Foreign Policy Rhetoric - Reports

The dispute over a group of four Kuril islands — Iturup, Kunashir, Shikotan and Habomai — has been souring Moscow-Tokyo relations for decades and serves as the main stumbling block to signing a permanent World War II peace treaty.
Sputnik

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — Tokyo has not abandoned its claims to Russia’s South Kuril Islands, despite a new foreign policy report dialing down the country's tone toward the matter, local media reported on Tuesday, citing Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono.

Japan presented its reviewed Diplomatic Bluebook earlier in the day. Unlike last year’s edition, this document refrains from directly claiming ownership of the disputed islands.

Commenting on the new foreign policy report, Kono stated that Tokyo's stance on the matter has not changed.

READ MORE: Japan Protests Over Planned Russian Drills on Kuril Islands — Reports

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stressed in January that the two sides had agreed to work on the basis of the 1956 joint declaration, "which means, first of all, the inalterability of the very first step — Japan’s recognition of the WWII outcome in full, including Russia’s sovereignty over all the islands of the South Kurils group."

The declaration in question stipulated that the Soviet Union transfer the two disputed islands — Habomai and Shikotan — to Japan only following the conclusion of a peace treaty. The two countries ratified the declaration, but Japan then refused to implement the agreements, insisting that all four major islands of the Southern Kurils be given to Tokyo.

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