(Update) Ishiba Attends Japan-U.S. Joint Memorial Service on Iwo Jima

(Update) Ishiba Attends Japan-U.S. Joint Memorial Service on Iwo Jima

Japanese and U.S. flags are held up in a joint memorial service that took place on Ioto, widely known as Iwo Jima, on Saturday to honor troops from the two countries who died in the savage battle fought on the Pacific island 80 years ago in the late phase of World War II. (Pool photo)
Japanese and U.S. flags are held up in a joint memorial service that took place on Ioto, widely known as Iwo Jima, on Saturday to honor troops from the two countries who died in the savage battle fought on the Pacific island 80 years ago in the late phase of World War II. (Pool photo)

   Ioto, March 29 (Jiji Press)--Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Saturday attended a Japan-U.S. joint memorial service on Ioto, widely known as Iwo Jima, to honor troops who died in fierce battle on the Pacific island 80 years ago.
   Ishiba became the first sitting Japanese prime minister to participate in the joint ceremony for the Japanese and U.S. troops killed in the Battle of Iwo Jima, which took place in the late phase of the Pacific War, part of World War II.
   "We must never forget that the peace and prosperity we enjoy (today) were built on the precious sacrifices of the war dead and the tireless efforts of people over the 80 years since the end of World War II," the prime minister said in the ceremony.
   "The Japan-U.S. alliance has become stronger than ever before and has become the cornerstone of peace and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region," he continued, expressing his determination to raise the bilateral alliance to "new heights."
   "It was a meaningful day," Ishiba later told reporters, noting that Japan and the United States reaffirmed their intentions to "further strengthen the alliance and work together for world peace."

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