
(Screenshot via The White House)
President Donald Trump solidified the long-standing Japan-U.S. alliance during his visit Monday by signing a trade deal securing rare earth mineral supplies to challenge China’s dominance.
Trump met Japan’s new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and Emperor Naruhito on Tuesday, looking to shore up a critical alliance in the American East Asian entente against China. After signing the trade deal expanding the partnership, Trump lauded Takaichi and the decades-old U.S.-Japan alliance aboard the Nimitz-class USS George Washington aircraft carrier.
“I have such respect for Japan as a country, and now I have a really great respect for the new and incredible Prime Minister,” Trump said aboard Nimitz-class USS George Washington aircraft carrier. “The cherished alliance between the U.S. and Japan is one of the most remarkable relationships anywhere in the world.”
Japan is set to invest $550 billion into the U.S., shoring up projects focused on energy generation, sources told Reuters Tuesday. In addition, Japan will use economic means at their disposal to create “fair markets for critical minerals and rare earths.”
Japan will continue to upscale American liquified natural gas purchases in order to ween off Russian supplies and diversify their imports of the critical fuel, according to Reuters.
.@POTUS: "Tonight, I'm more confident than ever that the friendship between the United States and Japan is strong… it's thriving, it's prosperous, and it will soon be, I think, greater than ever before." 🇺🇸🇯🇵 pic.twitter.com/8Yejsyr2Uj
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) October 28, 2025
Takaichi aims to prepare Japan to come to the U.S.’s aid in the event of Chinese aggression against Taiwan, with the PM pledging to accelerate Japan’s military buildup. The new PM has cited former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as a major inspiration for her policy, earning herself the nickname of Japan’s “Iron Lady.”
Takaichi was mentored by the late former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was known to be a close friend of Trump’s. Trump received Abe’s putter as a gift from Takaichi during his visit.
“The historic trade and investment deals that President Trump highlight the Administration’s historic success using tariffs to level the playing field for American workers and industries, while simultaneously strengthening Japan’s defense capabilities and deterrence in the Indo-Pacific,” White House Spokesman Kush Desai told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “These deals will play a key role in America’s next Golden Age.”
The Japanese Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to the DCNF’s request for comment.
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