Saturday, February 8, 2014

US vows to defend Japan against China


US vows to defend Japan against China

Secretary of State John Kerry vowed Friday that the United States would defend Japan against attack including over islands claimed by China as tensions boil between the Asian powers. Kerry, who said he would visit China next week, met in Washington with Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and…
AFP

US vows to defend Japan against China

AFP


US Secretary of State John Kerry (R) and Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida walk after their private bilateral meeting on Feburary 7, 2014 at the US Department of State in Washington
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US Secretary of State John Kerry (R) and Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida walk after their private …
Washington (AFP) - Secretary of State John Kerry vowed Friday that the United States would defend Japan against attack including over islands claimed by China as tensions boil between the Asian powers.
Kerry, who said he would visit China next week, met in Washington with Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and reaffirmed the 1960 treaty that commits the United States to protect its ally.
"That includes with respect to the South China Sea," he said, before correcting himself to say the East China Sea, where China and Japan have conflicting claims.
Fears of conflict rose in November when China imposed an Air Defense Identification Zone over much of the East China Sea.
Beijing says it now requires notification from planes crossing a group of islands administered by Tokyo, known in Japanese as the Senkaku and in Chinese as Diaoyu.
"The United States neither recognizes nor accepts China's declared East China Sea ADIZ and the United States has no intention of changing how we conduct operations in the region," Kerry said.
The United States and its allies are increasingly concerned China will take similar action in the South China Sea, where the Philippines in particular has voiced worries about Beijing's maritime claims.
Kishida, for his part, extended an invitation for President Barack Obama to make a state visit to Japan.
Diplomats say Obama is likely to visit Japan on an April tour of Asia, although Kerry is not expected to stop in Tokyo on his upcoming trip.
Kishida was visiting Washington after a rare open disagreement between the two allies.
The United States voiced disappointment in December when Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, known for his conservative views, paid a pilgrimage to the Yasukuni shrine which honors 2.5 million Japanese war dead including convicted war criminals from World War II.
Abe's visit outraged China and also fellow US ally South Korea. Both countries frequently accuse Japan of insufficient remorse for its aggression a century ago.
Kishida told Kerry that Japan valued its relationship with South Korea despite their "difficult issues," saying the two democracies needed to work together in the face of nuclear-armed North Korea.
"Going forward, we will make tenacious efforts in order to build a cooperative relationship with the Republic of Korea from a broad perspective," Kishida said.
Kishida also highlighted progress under Abe in relocating the Futenma air base within the island of Okinawa -- an issue that has cast a pall for years over defense ties between the two countries.
Kerry, in turn, praised Japan for addressing another longtime sore point by ratifying the Hague convention that sets procedures for the return of children abducted by one parent across international boundaries.
Kerry's latest trip to Asia comes as critics charge that his focus in his year in office on the Middle East has left US allies in Asia in want of a more robust presence by Washington.
Kerry said he was committed to the goal set in President Barack Obama's first term of putting a greater US focus on Asia, and said the strategy was impossible without "ironclad guarantees" between the United States and Japan.
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US vows to defend Japan against China

I think on a historical (1 thousand years) level that this is very strange. I understand the U.S. took care of Japan after World War II as a protectorate nation until the 1950s and we have had a very productive business relationship with them ever since and this is good both for the U.S. and Japan.

However, what the U.S. is wandering into the middle of is historically very difficult relationships between China and Japan, South Korea and Japan and other very (Historical Asian problems and issues) that really have nothing at all to do with the U.S.

So, though it is very nice of the U.S. for standing up for Japan against China in regard to Islands that really have no one living there at all (Japanese or Chinese) (on the islands that is) this is really strange.

First of all, these islands are almost as close to China as Taiwan is. Even the Tawianese kind of know inherently that they likely are going to have to eventually be a part of China (possibly) at some point in the next 100 years.

So, pretending it is still the 1950s with policies left over from World War II might not be helpful today.

I think the U.S. may not really understand just how historical (1000 years or more) this whole thing is between Japan and China and maybe what China wants is just respect from Japan and nothing more?

To say that the U.S. will defend Japan against China just makes this whole thing even stranger than it was already.

Though what China is doing is very strange maybe what Japan and the U.S. are doing is even stranger if you put in it a 1000 year historical context of the rivalry between Japan and China regarding all sorts of things.

 

 

 

 

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