Japan's Prime Minister Saw Joe Biden's Pic on Trump's Wall of Fame. Her Reaction Was Priceless.
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae
Takaichi had a successful visit to the United States, meeting with
President Trump and attending a White House dinner. Some observers noted
the meeting could become contentious, with many questioning Japan's
response to Operation Epic Fury. Takaichi stated that only Trump can
bring peace to the situation.
Yet, to get a real sense of how everyone feels about Joe Biden, the
White House posted a video of her trip in which Ms. Takaichi was shown
Trump’s Presidential Wall of Fame, where Joe Biden’s picture is the
autopen. She’s caught laughing at the photo:
Everyone knows—even
liberals—Joe Biden was cooked. And this nation was on cruise control,
especially in the last 18 months, which was a detriment to the US and
its allies.
It wasn’t all fun and games,
though I’m sure the media will obsess about Trump’s quip about Pearl
Harbor. Here’s what the two leaders discussed:
The
President championed American farmers, ranchers, and producers by
improving and accelerating market access for U.S. agricultural exports
to Japan.
In addition to the first tranche of three major
Japanese investments under the 2025 U.S.-Japan Strategic Trade and
Investment Agreement announced in February 2026, and worth $36 billion,
the United States welcomes a second tranche of Japanese investments,
including up to $40 billion from GE Vernova Hitachi in Tennessee and
Alabama to build small modular reactor power plants and up to $33
billion in natural gas generation facilities in Pennsylvania and Texas.
The
United States and Japan will continue to cooperate on matters related
to investment security, and Japan plans to strengthen its mechanism for
reviewing inbound investment based on national security risks.
The
President welcomed Japan’s support of U.S. reindustrialization. The
United States will prioritize visa processing for temporary business
travelers, particularly those who make significant investments, train
American workers, or transfer critical skills, techniques, or know-how.
The
President and Prime Minister welcomed the outcomes of the Indo-Pacific
Energy Security Ministerial and Business Forum, which brought together
17 Indo-Pacific Ministers and hundreds of business leaders to highlight
over $50 billion of projects and investments in the United States and
the region.
Under a new Memorandum of Cooperation, the two
nations will accelerate joint research and development and industry
cooperation on commercially-viable development of deep-sea critical
minerals resources, including rare-earth muds near Japan’s
Minamitorishima Island that could meet centuries’ worth of industrial
demand.
The United States and Japan reached a Critical Minerals
Action Plan to increase the production and diversity of critical
minerals, developing a plurilateral trade initiative supported by price
floors or other measures.
The U.S. Department of Energy and
Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
signed a Statement of Intent to drive cooperation on AI-enabled
scientific discovery and innovation, high-performance computing, and
quantum technologies.
Under a new Memorandum of Understanding,
the U.S. Argonne National Laboratory, Japan’s RIKEN and Fujitsu, and
NVIDIA will leverage public research institutions and private sector
partners to accelerate computing architectures and solutions.
Astronauts
will return to the Moon through NASA’s Artemis program with Japan’s
crewed pressurized lunar rover. The two countries will expand
cooperation in low-Earth orbit and the NASA-led Moon base, and will
launch the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope and Martian Moons
eXploration (MMX) later this year.
The two countries are
cooperating in biotech and pharmaceutical supply chain resilience under
the October 2025 Technology Prosperity Deal.
In 2025, the two
nations shared multiple epidemic intelligence reports and identified 19
public health events, leading to earlier detection and rapid response.
The
United States and Japan affirmed their commitment to deploying advanced
capabilities in Japan to enable a strong denial defense posture. This
year, the two sides will maintain close coordination, building on the
successful 2025 deployment of the U.S. Typhon missile system to mainland
Japan.
Following the bilateral feasibility study for AIM-120
Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile (AMRAAM) co-production, the two
countries will scope Japan’s future role in increased AMRAAM production
capacity.
In support of missile defense cooperation, the two
sides will rapidly increase by fourfold the production of Standard
Missile 3 Block IIA missiles in Japan.
The United States
welcomed Japan’s commitment to develop a secure and sovereign cloud
platform for government data to enhance bilateral information sharing,
planning, and coordination.
The two leaders committed
to peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait as an indispensable
element of regional security and global prosperity, supported the
peaceful resolution of cross-Strait issues through dialogue, and opposed
any attempts to unilaterally change the status quo, including by force
or coercion.
The United States and Japan reaffirmed their
commitment to the complete denuclearization of North Korea and to
enhance the Japan-U.S.-ROK partnership. The United States supports
Japan’s determination to achieve an immediate resolution of the abductee
issue.
The two sides will coordinate in third countries to address challenges posed by strategic competitors and rogue states.
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