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Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is escorted by Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at the start of their bilateral meeting on the sidelines of last month’s Quad leaders’ summit in Tokyo. Photo: AP

A new Quad? Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand eye four-way anti-China summit on sidelines of Nato meet

  • Tokyo has sounded out Seoul about the possibility of the quadripartite meeting, according to a source close to the South Korean presidential office
  • The envisaged meeting on the sidelines of next week’s Nato gathering is reportedly seen by the four nations as an attempt to keep an assertive China in check
Nato
Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand are considering holding a four-way summit on the fringes of a Nato leaders’ gathering in Spain next week, according to a source close to the South Korean presidential office.
The envisaged meeting on the sidelines of the transatlantic security alliance gathering is seen by the four nations as an attempt to keep an assertive China in check in the Indo-Pacific after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine heightened concerns about its implications for a region where Beijing has been expanding its influence.

Japan has sounded out South Korea about the possibility of the quadripartite meeting, the source said on Monday.

A Japanese coastguard vessel is watched by members of China’s coastguard and other observers after a combined maritime law enforcement exercise in the Philippines in 2015. Photo: Reuters
Leaders from the four nations are expected to deepen cooperation in realising a free and open Indo-Pacific and may discuss increased support for Pacific island nations, sources familiar with the matter said.
China and the South Pacific nation of Solomon Islands signed a security treaty earlier this year that would reportedly allow the deployment of Chinese troops, a development, if realised, that would spark concerns among regional powers such as Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Japan.

Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand are not members of Nato but have been invited as partners to the summit to be held in Madrid on June 29 and 30.

The four-way meeting would add a new dimension to the multilateral cooperation framework in pursuit of a free and open Indo-Pacific. Japan and Australia are part of the Quad framework with India and the United States.
The leaders of Australia, the US, Japan and India wave ahead of their talks at last month’s Quad summit in Tokyo. Photo: Kyodo
South Korea has been exploring the possibility of a summit between Yoon Suk-yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Madrid but the outlook remains uncertain, with a senior Japanese government source saying, “nothing is decided”.
As bilateral relations remain frosty over wartime issues that date back to the 1910-1945 Japanese colonisation of the Korean peninsula, no bilateral summit talks have been held since 2019.

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But Yoon, who took office in May with a pledge to strengthen ties with the US and Japan, has been seeking to improve Seoul-Tokyo ties in a “future-oriented” fashion.

Kishida has also stressed the need for dialogue even though Tokyo does not plan to budge on its stance that the ball is in South Korea’s court and issues related to wartime compensation have been settled by bilateral agreements.

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