President-elect Trump will meet with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe next Thursday at the request of the foreign leader, who is likely anxious to discuss the Trans-Pacific Partnership and America's relationship with Japan with the incoming Republican president.

Abe spoke with Trump by phone Wednesday night after his upset victory in Tuesday's presidential election. The Japanese leader's deputy chief cabinet secretary, Koichi Hagiuda, told the New York Times that the two men agreed to meet in New York City next week.

Trump has also extended invitations to British Prime Minister Theresa May and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to meet with him in the U.S.

The meeting between Trump and Abe comes as the president-elect is forced to confront many of the promises he made on the campaign trail, including his comments about Japan contributing too little to the costs of stationing American troops in the country under the U.S.-Japanese security treaty. Trump also suggested that Japan and South Korea be able to develop their own nuclear weapons.

Japan is one of 12 Pacific Rim countries who signed the Trans-Pacific Partnership earlier this year, a multinational trade agreement that Trump has vowed to dismantle in the first 100 days of his administration. Abe has promoted TPP as part of his economic program and Japan's lower house of parliament approved the agreement just this week.

The two men will likely discuss the trade deal during their meeting next week, though Hagiuda said Abe and Trump avoided getting into specifics during their phone call earlier this week.

Following his meeting with Trump, Abe will head to Lima, Peru where he and other world leaders are expected to meet with President Obama at the APEC summit.