Donald Trump, Iran and Japan
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Future outlook
Trump, G7
Digest more
By Tim Kelly TOKYO (Reuters) -Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba heads to Canada on Sunday for trade talks with U.S. President Donald Trump, hoping to persuade him to drop trade tariffs that have imperilled Japan's auto companies and threaten to undermine his fragile government.
9h
GMA Network on MSNTrump admin fully backs US-Japan-PH trilateral arrangements –officialsIn Hawaii’s Pearl Harbor, remnants of destroyed U.S. warships, aircraft, a submarine and proud tributes to the more than 2,400 Americans, who perished in the devastating blitzkrieg attack by Japan’s imperial forces in World War II are memorialized to underscore the need for international vigilance for peace.
President Donald Trump is set to meet with Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba over the Trump administration's sweeping auto tariffs that have rocked the global auto industry with uncertainty. What Happened: Ishiba will head to the G7 summit in Canada's Alberta province,
15h
Kyodo News on MSNJapan PM Ishiba to attend G7, eyes summit with Trump over tariffsJapanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba embarked on a four-day trip to Canada on Sunday to attend the first in-person summit o
Top Japanese tea brand Ito En's latest push to win over health-conscious U.S. customers with its traditional unsweetened brew has hit a new road bump: President Donald Trump's trade tariffs. The company had splashed out on a tie-up with Major League Baseball star Shohei Ohtani.
Group of Seven (G7) alliance leaders on Sunday are set to gather in Canada amid an upcoming deadline for President Trump’s tariff policy and an outbreak of conflict in the Middle East. Leaders from France,
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is set to host the G7 Leaders’ Summit. He will first meet US President Donald Trump. Trade tensions and global conflicts are key issues. Leaders from India, South Korea,
President Trump told reporters this week that he would send letters to trading partners in the next week or two setting unilateral tariff rates. “At a certain point, we’re just going to send letters out.