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Trump Bonds With Japan’s Leader Over Baseball and U.S. Beef

October 28, 2025
in News
Trump Bonds With Japan’s Leader Over Baseball and U.S. Beef
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Inside a gold-drenched palace in Tokyo on Tuesday morning, President Trump heaped praise on Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s new prime minister, telling her that their countries were “allies at the strongest level” and vowing to come to Japan’s aide on “any favors you need.”

Hours later, delivering a speech to hundreds of American troops aboard an aircraft carrier stationed near Tokyo, Mr. Trump stood side by side with Ms. Takaichi, saying that the two had become “very close friends” and adding, “This woman is a winner.”

The joint appearance, which bore all of the markings of one of Mr. Trump’s political rallies, was the capstone of a day in which Mr. Trump and Ms. Takaichi found an easy rapport — watching snippets of the World Series on television, eating lunch at Akasaka Palace in central Tokyo and sharing stories about their mutual friend, Shinzo Abe, the former premier who was assassinated in 2022.

But the series of meetings between Mr. Trump and Ms. Takaichi, a hard-line conservative who last week became the first woman to serve as Japan’s prime minister, delivered little in the way of solutions to some of the contentious trade issues between Washington and Japan.

The leaders signed two vaguely worded agreements — one declaring a “new golden age of the US-Japan alliance,” and another to cooperate on expanding the supply chain for rare earth metals. With both countries essentially agreeing to keep negotiating, Ms. Takaichi bought more time to strategize over how to spend the $550 billion her debt-strapped government has promised to invest as part of an earlier trade deal with the United States.

In front of the troops, Mr. Trump, who has been pressing Japan to spend more on defense, said he had approved an order of missiles to supply Japanese F-35 jets.

“I’ve just approved the first batch of missiles,” Mr. Trump of the missiles said to the crowd of service members on Tuesday afternoon. “I just want to tell Madam Prime Minister, they’ve been waiting for those missiles, and we got them here right away.”

During his speech at the Yokosuka Naval Base, the president said that the carmaker Toyota would be investing “over $10 billion” in American plants, but otherwise the day was short on details. There was no public talk about the major point of contention between the two countries: the details of how Japan intends to spend its promised $550 billion investment into the United States. That pledge was made as part of the trade deal, and in return Japan received a 15 percent tariff on its exports — a lower rate than Mr. Trump had initially threatened.

Instead, both leaders focused more on what they had in common: A warm relationship with Mr. Abe. Ms. Takaichi is a protégé of his, and on Tuesday she seemed to have some success in using Mr. Abe’s playbook to handle a mercurial American president. She even used the same interpreter that Mr. Abe had deployed: a Foreign Ministry official that Mr. Trump had seemed fond of.

“They had no issues with chemistry,” said Tetsuo Kotani, a professor at Meikai University in Japan.

During Mr. Trump’s visit to Tokyo in 2019, Mr. Abe treated the president to a round of golf, barbecue and a sumo match. Within minutes of meeting Mr. Trump, the new leader showed that she had closely studied Mr. Abe’s overtures. During the visit, she gave Mr. Trump a golf bag signed by Hideki Matsuyama, a Japanese professional golfer, and a putter that had belonged to Mr. Abe, along with a map of places within the United States that the Japanese plan to invest money, according to the White House.

On his way into Tokyo, Mr. Trump had kept expectations for the visit reasonably low, telling reporters that he had plans to “just announce a great friendship” while in the Japanese capital.

He seemed to have achieved that during a visit to the Akasaka Palace, where he and Ms. Takaichi bonded while catching a bit of the game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the LA Dodgers (a Japanese favorite and current home of their star player, Shohei Ohtani). Later, the pair spoke warmly of each other before using gold pens to sign “JAPAN IS BACK” baseball hats.

The two leaders met beneath a grand ceiling featuring a painting of Aurora, the Roman goddess of dawn. They were joined by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

“Prime Minister Abe often told me about your dynamic diplomacy,” Ms. Takaichi told Mr. Trump during their meeting, citing the president’s work to broker a cease-fire between Cambodia and Thailand, and his work to do the same between Israel and Hamas. “I myself am so impressed and inspired by you, Mr. President.”

Later, the pair toasted each other at lunch, where American rice was served alongside American beef — culinary reminders of the pressure the Trump administration has put on the Japanese to buy more American-made goods. Mr. Trump signed the menus afterward for the Japanese delegation, the White House said.

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said that Ms. Takaichi had also nominated Mr. Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize. The president, who talks frequently about his work to end global conflicts, is fixated on winning the award. The Japanese government said it had no comment on whether it had nominated Trump, based on the Nobel committee’s principle of not making disclosures about the process.

Mr. Abe had reportedly done the same during Mr. Trump’s first term.

For his part, Mr. Trump struck a magnanimous tone with Ms. Takaichi, praising her for becoming the first woman to be elected prime minister of Japan, saying it was a “big deal.”

Mr. Trump promised that the United States would offer its help if she ever needed it — a sentiment at odds with his administration’s drastic reduction in aid and assistance to other countries.

“I want to just let you know, anytime you have any question, any doubt, anything you want, any favors you need, anything I can do to help Japan, we will be there,” Mr. Trump told Ms. Takaichi. “We are an ally at the strongest level.”

Later in the day, Washington and Tokyo said they would work together on shipbuilding. But there were no announcements on how Japan would invest in the United States, a key part of the trade deal the two countries reached in July.

The agreement covering critical minerals and rare earths, a sector dominated by China, came after Beijing tightened export controls on rare earth minerals, essential components of everything from semiconductor chips to fighter jets.

As part of his six-day swing through Asia, Mr. Trump is scheduled to meet with Xi Jinping, the Chinese leader, in South Korea on Thursday.

At the Yokosuka Naval Base, Mr. Trump reiterated the history of Ms. Takaichi’s election. Ms. Takaichi jumped up and down and pumped her fist.

Taking the podium, Ms. Takaichi said that Japan would commit to building up its end of a joint military alliance designed to counter Chinese aggression in the Indo Pacific, particularly in the South China Sea.

She recalled an appearance at Yokosuka, six years earlier, by Mr. Trump and Mr. Abe, who promised at the time to worked together to jointly bolster their respective military presences in the region.

“I have renewed my determination to carry forward that resolve,” she said, “and to make the Indo-Pacific free and open, so that it will serve as the foundation of peace and prosperity for the entire region.”

River Akira Davis, Hisako Ueno and Kiuko Notoya contributed reporting from Tokyo.

Katie Rogers is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President Trump.

Erica L. Green is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his administration.

Javier C. Hernández is the Tokyo bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of Japan and the region. He has reported from Asia for much of the past decade, previously serving as China correspondent in Beijing.

The post Trump Bonds With Japan’s Leader Over Baseball and U.S. Beef appeared first on New York Times.

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