Japan’s prime minister plans a steamy tête-à-tête with Russia’s president

HIROSHI TOKUNO still remembers the stomp of army boots on the wooden floor of his classroom. When 600 Soviet troops arrived on the Japanese island of Shikotan on September 1st, 1945, he recalls, “We thought we’d be killed.” As the fear receded, he befriended the invaders and learned to speak Russian. Three years later, they herded him and his family onto a boat across choppy seas to mainland Japan.

Mr Tokuno, now 82, is one of about 17,000 Japanese expelled from what Japan calls its Northern Territories, four islands at the bottom of the Kurile chain (Chishima in Japanese), between Japan’s northernmost island of Hokkaido and the snowy wastes of Kamchatka (see map). In the 19th century Russia recognised Japanese sovereignty over the four islands, and in 1875 it ceded all the Kuriles to Japan. But a few days before Japan’s surrender to the Allies in 1945, the Soviet Union, which had not been fighting Japan, abruptly declared war. Soviet troops swiftly occupied the entire chain, setting off a 70-year dispute. Japan demands the four southernmost islands back. The Soviet Union offered to hand over the two smallest of them,...Continue reading

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