Tokyo (Kyodo) -- U.S. President Barack Obama will make the first visit to Hiroshima by a U.S. head of state on May 27, Japan's Foreign Ministry said Tuesday.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will accompany Obama to Hiroshima, the ministry said. The U.S. government also announced the visit.
Obama will visit the western Japanese city which was devastated by a 1945 U.S. atomic bomb at the final stage of World War II, on the occasion of a two-day Group of Seven summit ending that day also in Japan.
Obama may lay a wreath at a cenotaph in the Peace Memorial Park near ground zero, where a museum displays artifacts of atomic bomb victims and survivors, U.S. government officials said earlier.
In mid-April, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry visited memorial locations in Hiroshima such as the Peace Memorial Museum and the Atomic Bomb Dome, skeletal remains of the only major building that survived the explosion. Japan welcomed the visit on the sidelines of G-7 foreign ministers' talks in the city.
Obama, who took office in January 2009, was awarded that year's Nobel Peace Prize for his stated intention to seek a world without nuclear weapons, a commitment he made in a high-profile speech in Prague three months after inauguration.
A visit by a serving president to Hiroshima is expected to stir controversy in the United States due to concerns it could be construed as an apology for the attacks.
There is widespread belief that the atomic bombings were necessary to make Japan surrender and save U.S. soldiers as a result.
During his first trip to Japan as president in 2009, Obama told a press conference in Tokyo that he would be "honored" to have the opportunity to visit the cities.
The United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945 and another on Nagasaki on Aug. 9. Japan surrendered on Aug. 15, bringing the war to an end.
The number of people -- most of them civilians -- who had died by the end of 1945 from the bombings is estimated at 140,000 in Hiroshima and 74,000 in Nagasaki, according to the cities.
The highest-ranking U.S. official so far to have visited Hiroshima is Nancy Pelosi, who did so in 2008 as speaker of the House of Representatives. The House chief stands behind only the vice president in the line of succession to the U.S. presidency.
In 1984 Jimmy Carter, as a former American president, visited the Peace Memorial Museum in Hiroshima.
Obama has sent U.S. ambassadors John Roos and Caroline Kennedy to the annual peace ceremonies in the atomic-bombed cities since 2010. Rose Gottemoeller, undersecretary of state for arms control and international security, also attended the ceremony in Hiroshima last year.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will accompany Obama to Hiroshima, the ministry said. The U.S. government also announced the visit.
Obama will visit the western Japanese city which was devastated by a 1945 U.S. atomic bomb at the final stage of World War II, on the occasion of a two-day Group of Seven summit ending that day also in Japan.
Obama may lay a wreath at a cenotaph in the Peace Memorial Park near ground zero, where a museum displays artifacts of atomic bomb victims and survivors, U.S. government officials said earlier.
In mid-April, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry visited memorial locations in Hiroshima such as the Peace Memorial Museum and the Atomic Bomb Dome, skeletal remains of the only major building that survived the explosion. Japan welcomed the visit on the sidelines of G-7 foreign ministers' talks in the city.
Obama, who took office in January 2009, was awarded that year's Nobel Peace Prize for his stated intention to seek a world without nuclear weapons, a commitment he made in a high-profile speech in Prague three months after inauguration.
A visit by a serving president to Hiroshima is expected to stir controversy in the United States due to concerns it could be construed as an apology for the attacks.
There is widespread belief that the atomic bombings were necessary to make Japan surrender and save U.S. soldiers as a result.
During his first trip to Japan as president in 2009, Obama told a press conference in Tokyo that he would be "honored" to have the opportunity to visit the cities.
The United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945 and another on Nagasaki on Aug. 9. Japan surrendered on Aug. 15, bringing the war to an end.
The number of people -- most of them civilians -- who had died by the end of 1945 from the bombings is estimated at 140,000 in Hiroshima and 74,000 in Nagasaki, according to the cities.
The highest-ranking U.S. official so far to have visited Hiroshima is Nancy Pelosi, who did so in 2008 as speaker of the House of Representatives. The House chief stands behind only the vice president in the line of succession to the U.S. presidency.
In 1984 Jimmy Carter, as a former American president, visited the Peace Memorial Museum in Hiroshima.
Obama has sent U.S. ambassadors John Roos and Caroline Kennedy to the annual peace ceremonies in the atomic-bombed cities since 2010. Rose Gottemoeller, undersecretary of state for arms control and international security, also attended the ceremony in Hiroshima last year.