Russia–Japan peace treaty: Hard nut to crack

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Russia–Japan peace treaty: Hard nut to crack - Sputnik Africa, 1920, 24.10.2025
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Russia–Japan peace treaty: Hard nut to crack

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi recently indicated intent to sign a peace treaty with Russia. But why, 80 years after WWII, is the document yet to see the light of day?

Island row

Issue concerns the southern Kuril Islands: Iturup, Kunashir, Shikotan, and Habomai, which became part of Russia in 1946 following Japan’s surrender in WWII

In the 1951 San Francisco Treaty, Japan renounced claims to the Kurils, but did not specifically address these four islands

Russia considers its sovereignty over them final and non-negotiable

Diplomatic relations were restored in 1956 via the Moscow Declaration, without an "official" end to WWII

Then-USSR offered two islands (Habomai & Shikotan) in exchange for a peace treaty—but it never happened

Despite Abe–Putin talks in 2016–2018, no breakthrough was achieved

Chill in ties

Bilateral ties sharply deteriorated after Japan joined the West’s anti-Russian sanctions following the start of Russia’s special military operation, which prompted it to withdraw from the peace treaty talks

Russia froze bilateral economic projects in the southern Kurils, also canceling visa-free travel for former residents of the islands

In 2022, then-Japanese PM Fumio Kishida, for the first time since the 2000s, publicly called Russia’s control of the Kurils “unlawful,” stressing Japan's non-recognition of the post-war status of some of these territories.

Also in 2022, Takaichi, then-head of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party of Japan’s political council, claimed that Russia is “not a partner” for peace treaty negotiations and that continuing bilateral economic collaboration under the current conditions is impossible

“The path to resuming interstate dialogue” will only be possible if Japan abandons its hostile course, “seen as aligned with ‘Western solidarity’ over the situation in Ukraine,” Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko underscored when commenting on Takaichi’s push for a Russia–Japan peace treaty

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