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กก SAVANNAH, Georgia, June 8 (Xinhuanet) -- US President George W. Bush and
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi talked about Iraq, the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), economy, and other issues during their
75-minute luncheon meeting on Tuesday, a senior US administration official said.
Koizumi pledged that Japan will do "its part to the utmost" to assist with
the reconstruction of Iraq, and that Japan was preparing to continue deployment
of its Self-Defense Forces in theMiddle East country, based on the new UN
resolution on Iraq and a decision to be made in Tokyo sometime next week, the
official said.
Koizumi briefed Bush on his trip to Pyongyang on May 22. The two leaders
agreed that the six-party talks are the right process on the nuclear issue on
the Korean Peninsula, and that in that context, it was "absolutely essential" to
make sure that the DPRK make a commitment to all of the six parties, or all of
the other five parties, he said.
Koizumi also talked about the issue of Japanese abductees, the official
said.
Koizumi described the situation of Ms. Soga, a former abductee now in
Japan, whose husband, Sergeant Jenkins, was allegedly defected to the DPRK in
1965, while Bush explained the legal situation, he said.
Jenkins deserted from the US Army in 1965 and is still technically in the
US Army and wanted on four different charges, according to the official.
They talked about the economy, US military presence in Japan, and reform of
the United Nations, and agreed to work together on UN reform and on the
importance of Japan's permanent membership inthe Security Council as a goal, he
said.
Koizumi arrived in Sea Island Tuesday morning in the southeastern US state
of Georgia for a three-day Group of Eight summit that begins on Tuesday evening.
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