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September 28, 1993

Cable No. 5517, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 4)'

Number: [TN: blacked out]

Primary: North American Affairs Bureau Director-General

 

Sent: United Nations, September 28, 1993, [TN: time blacked out]

Received: MOFA, September28, 1993, [TN: time blacked out]

 

To: The Foreign Minister      

From: Ambassador Hatano

 

Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 4)

 

No. 5517 Secret Top Urgent

 

Outgoing Cable No. 5513 Separate Telegram 4: Russia

 

(Prime Minister) I would like to say a word about Russia. At the recent Japan-Russia summit meeting, we decided that President Yeltsin would visit Japan for three days from October 12. Of course, with Russia’s fluid domestic situation, there could be changes from this point onward. The Japanese people would like to resolve the territorial issue and normalize relations between Japan and Russia. Also, in regard to Russia’s reform efforts, our idea is to positively support them. Opening a new chapter through the accumulation to this point of negotiations on the territorial issue, we would like to construct a new era for Japan and Russia.

 

(Foreign Minister) Thank you, Mr. President, for your remarks in the recent meeting with Prime Minister Chernomyrdin.

 

(Clinton) Thank you. At this point, I strongly believe that it was right to support Yeltsin. Whoever replaces him, [TN: part of statement blacked out]. I believe, if we look at the map and at history, that Russia cannot change into a country with a sound democracy and market without the support not only of the United States and Europe but of Japan as well. I believe that Russia’s realization as a country with a sound economy and a strong democracy would be in the interest of all the world’s countries.

 

Passed to all [Japanese] diplomatic missions in the United States (except for Agana and Detroit), Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Canada, and Russia.  (End)

 

Hosokawa says that he has invited Yeltsin to visit Japan in October 1993 and hopes to resolve the Russo-Japanese territorial dispute. Clinton hopes for positive political and economic developments inside Russia.



Related Documents

September 28, 1993

Cable No. 5513, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting'

Ambassador Hatano (then serving as Japan's Permanent Representative to the United Nations) informs the Foreign Minister of the results of the talks between Prime Minister Hosokawa and President Clinton held on September 27, 1993. Summaries of the different aspects of the talks were sent in several subsequent cables.

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Cable No. 5514, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 1)'

Hosokawa and Clinton discuss health care reform in the United States and political reform in Japan.

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Cable No. 5515, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 2)'

Hosokawa, Clinton, and Warren Christopher discuss US-Japan economic relations.

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Cable No. 5516, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 3)'

Prime Minister Hosokawa encourages positives relations between the United States and China.

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Cable No. 5518, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 5)'

The contents of this cable, apparently dealing with the North Korean nuclear issue, were withheld in their entirety by the Japanese Foreign Ministry.

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Cable No. 5519, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 6)'

Clinton thanks Hosokawa for Japan's monetary support for the Middle East.

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Cable No. 5520, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 7)'

Hosokawa and Clinton express hope for the successful conclusion of the Uruguay Round.

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Cable No. 5521, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 8)'

Hosokawa voices support for the Japan-US Business Conference at the end of his meeting with Clinton.

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Cable No. 5522, Ambassador Hatano to the Foreign Minister, 'Japan-United States Summit Meeting (Separate Telegram 9)'

Hosokawa and Clinton make small talk concerning the appointment of Walter Mondale as U.S. Ambassador to Japan and a potential golf outing together.

Document Information

Source

Diplomatic Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, File No. 2014-00539. Translated by Stephen Mercado.

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2021-01-06

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