US President Joe Biden, centre, with South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol, left, and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at Camp David. EPA
US President Joe Biden, centre, with South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol, left, and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at Camp David. EPA
US President Joe Biden, centre, with South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol, left, and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at Camp David. EPA
US President Joe Biden, centre, with South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol, left, and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at Camp David. EPA

US brings South Korea and Japan closer together in landmark Camp David summit


Ellie Sennett
  • English
  • Arabic

The US, Japan, and South Korea have committed to “unprecedented” military, technological and health co-operation, after a landmark trilateral meeting at Camp David.

US President Joe Biden hosted the leaders of South Korea and Japan on Friday for the summit aimed at warming relations between Washington's strongest Indo-Pacific allies whose relationship has been strained.

“From this moment on, Camp David will be remembered as a historic place where the Republic of Korea, the United States and Japan proclaimed that we will bolster the rules based international order and play key roles to enhance regional security and prosperity,” South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol said at a joint press conference following the meeting.

Mr Biden praised the summit's deliverables as a sign of “a new era” in the East Asian theatre, while Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida heralded the outlined principles as “a historic turning point for the international community, to be a new compass for trilateral co-operation”.

That co-operation includes a multiyear military exercise plan, part of a series of “significant steps” to enhance trilateral security co-operation in the region “in the face of North Korean provocations,” the White House said.

The leaders agreed to “strengthen co-operation” on sanctioning North Korea, which has ramped up weapons testing, Mr Kishida said at the press conference.

There is also a commitment to a “duty to consult” in the event of a security crisis affecting any of their countries, senior White House officials said on Thursday.

That includes investments in technology to support a “state-of-the-art trilateral hotline” ready to be engaged in “moments of crisis and uncertainty”, the White House added.

Washington emphasised that the agreement does not “infringe upon” each country's right to defend itself.

“But what we are building here is a common security framework that increasingly will give our leaders and our top national security officials the incentive to work closely together,” one official said.

The allies also agreed on a trilateral “expert exchange”, aimed at boosting Washington's “cancer moonshot” imitative that is working to “end cancer as we know it”.

Washington highlighted the importance of the summit's setting, Camp David, which has been the backdrop for meetings between Israeli and Palestinian delegations as well as key conferences aimed at ending the Second World War.

“That venue is reserved for only the most important and significant such meetings,” a White House official added.

The warming of relations between Seoul and Tokyo, American allies with deep-rooted and enduring grievances stemming from Japan's colonial legacy in the Korean peninsula, is significant for Washington's Indo-Pacific alliance structure against rival China.

The US and South Korea hold military drills – in pictures

Rahm Emanuel, Washington's ambassador to Japan, made that wider context clear at a Wednesday Brookings Institute roundtable.

“This is a fundamental advancement of America's interests. China's entire strategy is based on the premise that America's No 1 and No 2 ally in the region [Japan and South Korea] can't get together and get on the same page,” Mr Emanuel said.

“That's fundamentally different now.

“Our message is we're a permanent Pacific power and presence and you can bet long on America. China's message is we're the rising power, they're declining, either get in line or you're going to get the Philippine treatment,” referring to recent tensions between Beijing and Manila in the South China Sea.

But the White House on Thursday emphasised that the trilateral summit is “really not going to be centrally focused” on Beijing messaging, but rather on the partnership building between Tokyo and Seoul, a White House official said.

Mr Yoon and Mr Kishida met earlier this month in the first bilateral summit between South Korean and Japanese leaders in more than a decade, in what has been welcomed by both sides as a step towards reconciliation.

Mira Rapp-Hooper, the White House National Security Council's senior director for East Asia and Oceania, told a Brookings Institute meeting on Wednesday: “We have two particular leaders meeting their moment, and we do believe we have a new chapter and a new beginning as a result of those things.”

American officials said they see a moment of alignment between the two Asian nations and the US, with one saying during the Thursday press call: “I don't think I've ever been involved in a series of preparations in which the alignment between the three governments was so clear and straightforward.”

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The President's Cake

Director: Hasan Hadi

Starring: Baneen Ahmad Nayyef, Waheed Thabet Khreibat, Sajad Mohamad Qasem 

Rating: 4/5

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets

Miss Granny

Director: Joyce Bernal

Starring: Sarah Geronimo, James Reid, Xian Lim, Nova Villa

3/5

(Tagalog with Eng/Ar subtitles)

THE CARD

2pm: Maiden Dh 60,000 (Dirt) 1,400m

2.30pm: Handicap Dh 76,000 (D) 1,400m

3pm: Handicap Dh 64,000 (D) 1,200m

3.30pm: Shadwell Farm Conditions Dh 100,000 (D) 1,000m

4pm: Maiden Dh 60,000 (D) 1,000m

4.30pm: Handicap 64,000 (D) 1,950m

THE DEALS

Hamilton $60m x 2 = $120m

Vettel $45m x 2 = $90m

Ricciardo $35m x 2 = $70m

Verstappen $55m x 3 = $165m

Leclerc $20m x 2 = $40m

TOTAL $485m

Who has been sanctioned?

Daniella Weiss and Nachala
Described as 'the grandmother of the settler movement', she has encouraged the expansion of settlements for decades. The 79 year old leads radical settler movement Nachala, whose aim is for Israel to annex Gaza and the occupied West Bank, where it helps settlers built outposts.

Harel Libi & Libi Construction and Infrastructure
Libi has been involved in threatening and perpetuating acts of aggression and violence against Palestinians. His firm has provided logistical and financial support for the establishment of illegal outposts.

Zohar Sabah
Runs a settler outpost named Zohar’s Farm and has previously faced charges of violence against Palestinians. He was indicted by Israel’s State Attorney’s Office in September for allegedly participating in a violent attack against Palestinians and activists in the West Bank village of Muarrajat.

Coco’s Farm and Neria’s Farm
These are illegal outposts in the West Bank, which are at the vanguard of the settler movement. According to the UK, they are associated with people who have been involved in enabling, inciting, promoting or providing support for activities that amount to “serious abuse”.

RESULTS

Bantamweight: Victor Nunes (BRA) beat Azizbek Satibaldiev (KYG). Round 1 KO

Featherweight: Izzeddin Farhan (JOR) beat Ozodbek Azimov (UZB). Round 1 rear naked choke

Middleweight: Zaakir Badat (RSA) beat Ercin Sirin (TUR). Round 1 triangle choke

Featherweight: Ali Alqaisi (JOR) beat Furkatbek Yokubov (UZB). Round 1 TKO

Featherweight: Abu Muslim Alikhanov (RUS) beat Atabek Abdimitalipov (KYG). Unanimous decision

Catchweight 74kg: Mirafzal Akhtamov (UZB) beat Marcos Costa (BRA). Split decision

Welterweight: Andre Fialho (POR) beat Sang Hoon-yu (KOR). Round 1 TKO

Lightweight: John Mitchell (IRE) beat Arbi Emiev (RUS). Round 2 RSC (deep cuts)

Middleweight: Gianni Melillo (ITA) beat Mohammed Karaki (LEB)

Welterweight: Handesson Ferreira (BRA) beat Amiran Gogoladze (GEO). Unanimous decision

Flyweight (Female): Carolina Jimenez (VEN) beat Lucrezia Ria (ITA), Round 1 rear naked choke

Welterweight: Daniel Skibinski (POL) beat Acoidan Duque (ESP). Round 3 TKO

Lightweight: Martun Mezhlumyan (ARM) beat Attila Korkmaz (TUR). Unanimous decision

Bantamweight: Ray Borg (USA) beat Jesse Arnett (CAN). Unanimous decision

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
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May 2017

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October 2025

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Updated: August 19, 2023, 4:09 AM