Soviet–Japanese Joint Declaration of 1956


The Soviet Union did not sign the Treaty of Peace with Japan in 1951. On October 19, 1956, Japan and the Soviet Union signed a Joint Declaration providing for the end of the state of war, and for restoration of diplomatic relations between USSR and Japan. The two parties also agreed to continue negotiations for a peace treaty. In addition, the Soviet Union pledged to support Japan for the UN membership and waive all World War II reparations claims. The joint declaration was accompanied by a trade protocol that granted reciprocal most-favored-nation treatment and provided for the development of trade. Japan derived few apparent gains from the normalization of diplomatic relations. The second half of the 1950s saw an increase in cultural exchanges.

Territorial provisions

The Joint Declaration provided, in its article 9, for continuation of negotiations for the conclusion of a peace treaty after the restoration of diplomatic relations between the countries and further stipulated, that "in this connexion, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, desiring to meet the wishes of Japan and taking into consideration the interests of the Japanese State, agrees to transfer to Japan the Habomai Islands and the island of Shikoton, the actual transfer of these islands to Japan to take place after the conclusion of a Peace Treaty between the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and Japan". At the time, the United States threatened to keep Ryukyu Islands if Japan gave away the other islands, preventing the negotiation of the promised treaty.
Moreover, while the clause was supposedly based upon agreement between the two nations, each came to interpret it differently. The Soviet Union maintained, that the territorial problem had become a closed book, and that territorial demarcation won't be discussed beyond the promised transfer of two islands. When the Japanese side tried to include a passage ‘including territorial issue’ in a sentence regarding continuation of the negotiations, the Soviet side refused, explicitly stating that it did so precisely to avoid interpretation which suggests other "territorial questions" beyond Shikotan-Habomai issue. The Japanese agreed to drop expression, yet different interpretation arrived anyway: when final agreement had been reached on the terms of the Joint Declaration, the Japanese delegation decided to interpret it as including discussion of the territorial problem in the future peace negotiations, interpreting the declaration jointly with ‘Hatoyama-Bulganin letters’ and ‘Matsumoto-Gromyko letters’. Exchanged before the final negotiations on the declaration,they intended to confirm the conditions for under the so-called ‘Adenauer Formula’, in which diplomatic relations were to be restored without signing a peace treaty and the territorial problem was to be shelved for future negotiation. The formula did not pass, however: in spite of preliminary agreement with the Soviets to shelve the territorial issue, Japan raised it at the negotiations and managed to get aforementioned territorial clause in the declaration, yet "interpreted in such a manner as to preserve the plenipotentiaries’ face at home": "Habomais and Shikotan were promised in the Joint Declaration, and the question of Kunashiri and Etorofu was to be settled during negotiations for a peace treaty". The disagreement between "two-island transfer" stipulated in the 1956 declaration and Japan's persistent demand of "four-island return" became the cornerstone for continuation of the Kuril Islands dispute in Soviet and post-Soviet years.

Legacy

On November 14, 2004, the head of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov said on the NTV interview that the Russian Federation, which was the successor state of the Soviet Union, recognized the Declaration of 1956, and was ready to have territorial talks with Japan on that basis, followed by President Vladimir Putin on the next day. Yet, the dispute persists, no peace treaty has yet been signed, and the islands remain under Russian administration.