State Duma Chairman Sergei Naryshkin echoed this sentiment when he said that cooperation between two countries was inevitable.
"I believe that Russia and Japan fully understand that there is no alternative to fostering cooperation between our nations," he noted while on a visit to Japan. Both countries have "built up mutual trust" by developing ties and removing artificial barriers that stand in the way of a fruitful relationship.
During his visit, Naryshkin also attended the opening ceremony of an annual festival of Russian culture. This year the event marked six decades of diplomatic relations between Russia and Japan that were restored on October 19, 1956.
That year, the Soviet Union also pledged to transfer the islands of Shikotan and the Habomai to Japan once both nations signsigned a peace treaty. This offer was off the table by 1960 when the United States and Japan amended the 1952 Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security. The pact paved the way for America's continued military presence in the island state that the Soviet Union viewed as a threat to its security.
Russia's current leadership abides by the 1956 Soviet–Japanese joint declaration, as recently stated by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
Many hope that upcoming talksbetween delegations headed by Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Morgulov and Japan's former envoy to Russia Chikahito Harada will be fruitful, but few expect a breakthrough.
"Both sides disagree sharply" on the fate of the Kuril Islands that Tokyo refers to as the Northern Territories, said Valery Kistanov, who heads the Center for Japanese Studies at the Institute of Far Eastern Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
"It's hard for me to imagine that Japan has agreed to return to the 1956 Declaration and restrict its territorial claims to two islands. It is equally hard to imagine that Russia has accommodated Japan's wishes to hand over all four islands," he noted.