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  • In September August 2015, Japan protested Russia’s decision to send an official into

  • mutually disputed territory. They alleged that Russia must seek permission from Japan

  • to visit the contested islands, while Russia says they have no obligation to do so. The

  • two countries have been in dispute over the Kuril Islands since World War Two. So, why

  • are Russia and Japan still at war?

  • Well, the territory in question is a string of small islands running from northern Japan

  • to eastern Russia. Portions of the islands had been claimed by both countries since the

  • 18th century, but by World War II, Japan was effectively in control of the islands. In

  • the last few days of World War 2, the Soviets began a massive invasion of Japanese territory,

  • seizing North Korea and the Kuril Islands. When the war ended, the question of how to

  • allocate Japan’s former territory became a problematic topic.

  • The 1945 Yalta Agreement between the US, the UK, and the USSR, decided that the Soviet

  • Union would receive the Kuril islands if they went to war against Japan. However, just a

  • few months later, the Potsdam Declaration laid out the terms of Japan’s surrender

  • to Allied forces. These terms granted Japan sovereignty over a number of relevant islands

  • in the Kuril island chain. Although most of the islands are not mentioned by name, Japan

  • and the US have maintained that the phraseminor islandsincludes the disputed

  • territory.

  • Finally, a third document, the 1951 Treaty of San Francisco, created the most confusion.

  • While the agreement was intended to be a final peace treaty between Japan and the Allies,

  • the Kuril dispute stood in the way. The treaty stated that Japan would renounce its claim

  • over the islands, but it did not grant the Soviet Union any control over them. As a result,

  • the USSR refused to sign the document, which led to the US revoking Russia’s rights to

  • the islands. The Allies agreed that non-signatories to the peace treaty would not be granted any

  • territorial claims.

  • In 1956, the two countries signed a joint declaration, effectively postponing the question,

  • along with any peace treaty agreements. Today, the islands are controlled by Russia, and

  • are generally acknowledged to be Russian territory. Most of the 20,000 inhabitants are of Slavic

  • descent. In recent years, Russia has taken a particularly aggressive stance on territory

  • control, leaving little room for Japan to ever reclaim the islands. Unfortunately, considering

  • the scope of both country’s territorial disputes, it seems unlikely that either one

  • will back down and make peace.

  • While Russia and Japan don’t have the warmest relationship, South Korea has some serious

  • grudges against Japan. To find out more about why one hates the other, watch our video.

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In September August 2015, Japan protested Russia’s decision to send an official into

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