By VOA News , Carla Babb Russian President Vladimir Putin (L) and Japanese Prime clergyman Shinzo Abe go to a Japanese-Russian gathering in Tokyo, Japan, Dec. 16, 2016. Russian President Vladimir Putin showed up in Japan Thursday for a summit with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at a natural aquifer resort, where they will look for progress on a regional column that has hindered a harmony bargain officially finishing World War II. The different sides are probably going to secure concessions to monetary participation in territories from clinical innovation to vitality. However, both have tried to hose desires for a forward leap in the fight over the desolate islands in the western Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Russian President Vladimir Putin finished two days of talks with no critical advancement on the significant issue that partitions them, a regional contest that goes back to World War II.The two pioneers met Friday in Tokyo in the wake of holding talks the day preceding at a natural aquifer resort in southwest Japan.In the Japanese capital, police got patriot nonconformists far from the summit. The demonstrators were requesting that Russia give back Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s visit to the Philippines this week shows U.S. partner Tokyo’s aspiration to stay aware of developing Chinese impact in the geopolitically key Southeast Asian nation by guaranteeing consistent progressions of help and speculation, examiners say.Abe made a trip Thursday and Friday to Manila and Davao, the second-biggest Philippine city and old neighborhood of President Rodrigo Duterte. He’s the principal head of state to visit Duterte since the Philippine Twitter Instagram Facebook YouTube RSS US Politics Migration About America Silicon Valley and Technology Africa The Americas East Asia Pacific Europe Center East South and Central Asia Expressions and Culture Day in Photos Economy and Business Radicalism Watch Press Freedom Science and Health VOA StudentU VOA Connect Exiles About VOA Contact VOA Terms of Use and Privacy Notice Openness Get Our Mobile App Use Requests VOA Around the World VOA Pronunciation Guide Media Relations Tune in on the radio Satellite Schedule Buy in to Our Newsletters PENTAGON – Two Russian aircraft circumnavigated Japan Tuesday, a guard official told VOA. The authority from U.S. Pacific Command, which abroad U.S. military tasks in the Asia-Pacific locale, said Pacific Command didn’t make any move during the action in light of the fact that the Russian aircraft’s flight ways didn’t cause concern. Another U.S. official revealed to VOA the Russian airplane had remained in universal airspace all through the trips around the island country. Prior in the day, Fox News revealed that the move had provoked Japan’s military to scramble contender planes while the North American Aerospace Defense Command, known as NORAD, expanded its risk pose. NORAD representative Ashleigh Peck disclosed to VOA that it isn’t uncommon for different territories secured by NORAD to move danger reaction stances for activities or genuine occasions. However, she would not verify or refute any ongoing stance changes on account of operational security reasons.