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Trump gets royal welcome in Japan, China as trade truce hopes rise

Reuters
8991114_web1_2025-10-27T102057Z_1_LYNXMPEL9Q0DO_RTROPTP_3_USA-TRUMP-JAPAN
Pool via REUTERS
President Donald Trump meets with Japan’s Emperor Naruhito at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, Japan October 27, 2025.
8991114_web1_2025-10-27T101349Z_1_LYNXMPEL9Q0DI_RTROPTP_3_USA-TRUMP-JAPAN
Kyodo via REUTERS
President Donald Trump waves upon his arrival at Haneda airport in Tokyo, Japan, in this photo released by Kyodo October 27, 2025.
8991114_web1_2025-10-27T100149Z_1349210759_RC2AKHADNKUI_RTRMADP_3_USA-TRUMP-JAPAN
Pool via REUTERS
President Donald Trump meets with Japan’s Emperor Naruhito at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, Japan October 27, 2025.
8991114_web1_2025-10-27T095636Z_1321348577_RC29KHAFU5RQ_RTRMADP_3_USA-TRUMP-JAPAN
Pool via REUTERS
President Donald Trump meets with Japan’s Emperor Naruhito at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, Japan October 27, 2025.

TOKYO — President Donald Trump received a royal welcome on Monday in Japan, the latest leg of a five-day Asia trip which he hopes to cap with an agreement on a trade war truce with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Trump, making his longest journey abroad since taking office in January, announced a flurry of deals on trade and critical minerals with four Southeast Asian nations during the first stop in Malaysia and is set to meet Xi in South Korea on Thursday.

Negotiators from the world’s top two economies hashed out a framework on Sunday for a deal to pause steeper American tariffs and Chinese rare earths export controls, U.S. officials said. The news sent Asian stocks soaring to record peaks.

“I’ve got a lot of respect for President Xi and I think we’re going to come away with a deal,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One before landing in the Japanese capital Tokyo.

Trump meets Japanese emperor

Wearing a gold tie and blue suit, Trump gave a few fist pumps before his helicopter whisked him off for a scenic night tour of Tokyo, several of its towers lit up in the red, white and blue of the American flag.

He later headed in a long motorcade to the Imperial Palace, where he shook hands and posed for photographs with Japanese Emperor Naruhito.

Trump has already won a $550-billion investment pledge from Tokyo in exchange for respite from punishing import tariffs.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Japanese counterpart Ryosei Akazawa, architects of the tariff deal agreed in July, discussed power grids as being a potential investment area over a sushi lunch in Tokyo earlier on Monday, local media reported.

Japan’s newly elected prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, is hoping to further impress Trump on Tuesday with promises to purchase U.S. pickup trucks, soybeans and gas, and announce an agreement on shipbuilding, sources with knowledge of the plans told Reuters.

Takaichi, who became Japan’s first female premier last week, told Trump that strengthening their countries’ alliance was her “top priority” in a telephone call on Saturday.

Trump said he was looking forward to meeting Takaichi, a close ally of his late friend and golfing partner, former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, adding: “I think she’s going to be great.”

Thousands of police are guarding Tokyo. A knife-wielding man was arrested on Friday outside the U.S. embassy and an anti-Trump protest is planned in downtown Shinjuku.

Trade and security on agenda for talks

Trump was the first foreign leader to meet Naruhito after he came to the throne in 2019, continuing an imperial line that some say is the world’s oldest hereditary monarchy.

Naruhito’s role, however, is purely symbolic, and the key diplomacy will take place with Takaichi on Tuesday.

Trump and Takaichi are set to meet at the nearby Akasaka Palace, where he met Abe six years ago, and will be welcomed by a military honor guard. Among the investment pledges, the two countries will sign a memorandum of understanding on Tuesday on investment in shipbuilding, a source with knowledge of the plans said.

Takaichi is also expected to reassure Trump that Tokyo is willing to do more on security after telling lawmakers on Friday she plans to accelerate Japan’s biggest defense build-up since World War Two.

Japan hosts the largest concentration of U.S. military power abroad. Trump has said previously Tokyo is not spending enough to defend its islands from an increasingly assertive China.

While Takaichi has said she will speed plans to boost defense spending to 2% of GDP, she may struggle to commit Japan to any further increases that Trump seeks, as her ruling coalition does not have a majority in parliament.

Trump is due to leave on Wednesday for Gyeongju in South Korea, where he will hold talks with President Lee Jae Myung. Bessent told reporters the overall framework of a deal with South Korea was also done but would not be finalized this week.

Thursday’s expected meeting with Xi will come after Washington and Beijing have raised tariffs on each other’s exports and threatened to halt trade involving critical minerals and technologies.

Neither side expects a breakthrough that would restore the terms of trade that existed before Trump’s return to power.

Talks to prepare for the meeting have focused on managing disagreements and modest improvements, before a visit by Trump to China expected early next year.

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