
Japanese and Canadian leaders agree to enhance security ties
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and his Canadian counterpart, Mark Carney, agreed Monday to enhance bilateral security cooperation.
In a 20-minute meeting held on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit in Kananaskis, Canada, Ishiba and Carney confirmed that their countries will sign early an agreement to share classified information and an accord allowing defense equipment exports to each other's nations.
This is the first time for the two leaders to hold talks in person.
They also discussed the global economy, hurt by U.S. tariff measures, and agreed to strengthen cooperation in liquefied natural gas and small modular reactor projects involving Japanese companies and in the fields of storage batteries and critical minerals.
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A firefighting helicopter drops water over the site of Russian drone and missile strikes in Kyiv on Tuesday. | REUTERS The final blow for the working group came roughly three weeks ago, when most members of the White House National Security Council — including the entire team dealing directly with the Ukraine war — were dismissed as part of a broad purge, according to the three officials. The effort was set up and coordinated by high-ranking NSC staffers, the officials said, though it included participants from the State Department, Treasury Department, the Pentagon and intelligence community. Among those working on the effort was Andrew Peek, the top NSC official for Europe and Russia, who was removed in May. It is unclear precisely who gave the order to discontinue the effort, but the officials suggested the depth of the NSC cuts made its continuation largely untenable. 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Kyodo News
5 hours ago
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Japan, South Korea summit set for June 17 on G7 fringes in Canada
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