President Joe Biden arrived in Japan on Thursday for a truncated Asia visit meant to bolster allies amid China's growing military and economic ambitions.
The trip, once planned for eight days, has been shortened by half; two of Biden's three stops were scrapped so he could return to Washington for negotiations over raising the US debt ceiling.
Left with only a stop in Japan for the Group of Seven summit, Biden will attempt to coalesce the leaders of some of the world's largest economies around a commitment to take on Beijing's aggressions.
Biden's aides insist there won't be any "arm twisting" around the G7 table when it comes to China, and have acknowledged that each of the countries represented — which include France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan and the United States -- will decide on its own approach.
At the same time, the president places a premium on collective action, and wants a unified front when it comes to issues like Taiwan, the South China Sea and Beijing's coercive economic practices.
"I think you will see, coming out of this summit, alignment and convergence around the fundamental principles of our approach to the People's Republic of China," US national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters aboard Air Force One as Biden flew to Japan. "Of course, each country has its own distinct relationship and its own distinct approach, but those relationships and approaches are built on a common basis. And I think you will see that reflected in the outcomes of the G7."
Over the course of his four days here, Biden plans to attend a number of group and individual meetings with G7 allies, as well as with several leaders not in the G7 who have been invited this year as guests. He'll hold a press conference Sunday before returning to Washington.
He'll hold talks with Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida when he lands. The host of this year's summit has adopted a more robust foreign policy amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine and China's growing military assertiveness, a development welcomed inside the White House.
In December, Kishida unveiled a new national security plan that amounted to the country's biggest military buildup since World War II, doubling defense spending and veering from its pacifist constitution in the face of growing threats from regional rivals, including China.
The decision marked a dramatic shift for both the nation and the US security alliance in the Indo-Pacific region.
When Kishida made a secret trip to Kyiv in March, he became the first post-World War II leader to visit a war-zone -- further cementing the notion that Japan's foreign policy was entering a new era.
He's also selected the symbolic city of Hiroshima, where he has family roots, to host world leaders. Destroyed by an American atomic bomb in 1945, the city acts as a reminder to the gathered leaders of the importance of their diplomatic efforts. More than 100,000 people were killed in the bombing.
Biden is the second US president to visit Hiroshima. President Barack Obama paid a historic visit here in 2016, laying a wreath in a memorial park and meeting with some survivors.
The bombing of Hiroshima hastened an end to World War II but launched a new era of atomic brinksmanship. This week's gathering comes at a moment of heightened nuclear fears, with threats emanating from North Korea, Iran and Russia -- each without a clear solution.