Trump, G7
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President Donald Trump on Monday used his first public appearance at the 2025 Group of Seven summit to revive a years-old complaint about the group’s response to Russia’s 2014 invasion of Crimea and attack the the host country’s former head of government during a bilateral meeting with the current head of that government.
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.
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Japan builds near $700M fund to lure foreign academic talentFor researchers yearning to earn some yen and escape Trump 2.0 Japan is the latest nation hoping to tempt disgruntled US researchers alarmed by the Trump administration's hostile attitude to academia to relocate to the Land of the Rising Sun.
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U.S. Steel and Japan's Nippon Steel said Trump had approved their merger after they signed a national security agreement with the U.S. government.
Nippon Steel Corp. won conditional U.S. approval for its $14.1 billion purchase of United States Steel Corp., capping a lengthy saga in a tie-up that will create one of the world’s largest steel companies.
Enten, pointing to polling from the Pew Research Center released on Wednesday, revealed that 81% of Germans held no confidence in Trump, followed by 78% for France, 77% for Canada, 68% for Italy, 62% for the United Kingdom and 61% for Japan.
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,
The agreement brings the companies one step closer to completing the $14.3 billion sale of U.S. Steel that the companies agreed to in December 2023.
President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Friday approving U.S. Steel's merger with Japan's Nippon Steel, after the companies signed a national security agreement with the U.S. government.
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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.
By Kentaro Okasaka and John Geddie TOKYO (Reuters) -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.