[Correction: Mr. Hatoyama was the DPJ PM until 2010, well before the current Senkaku/Diaoyutai crisis. Sorry 'bout that.--CH 1/18/13]
The PRC regime has been preparing for escalating confrontation with Japan if Tokyo decided it really wanted to test the commitment of the United States to back it in the crisis over the Senkaku/Daioyutai Islands.
The PRC regime has been preparing for escalating confrontation with Japan if Tokyo decided it really wanted to test the commitment of the United States to back it in the crisis over the Senkaku/Daioyutai Islands.
Showing Japan the undesirability of openly aligning with the
United States as the U.S. pivots into Asia—instead of giving some lip service
at least to PRC interests and priorities—is pretty close to an existential
issue for the PRC.
And the PRC knows that the U.S. appetite for giving Japan
military support over the Senkakus/Diaoyutai is extremely limited, despite the
brave talk of the U.S. defense appropriations bill. If an incident had occurred between the PRC
and Japanese ships and planes jostling around the islands, the U.S. would have
been faced with the very difficult choice between exacerbating a crisis in Asia
and admitting the limitations of the “pivot”, not only to Japan but to Vietnam,
the Philippines, and, for that matter, everybody else.
So, if the Japanese forces had decided to engage in some
pushback on the provocative PRC actions around the Senkaku/Diaoyutai, the PRC
would have made sure that things got pretty ugly pretty quick.
And if the PRC wanted to try to strangle the pivot in its
cradle, they might have rolled the dice, provoked an incident, and let the
crisis escalate.
However, it seems that the PRC is thankfully willing to let
the crisis de-escalate for now.
Ex-Prime Minister Hatoyama—on whose watch the disastrous
decision to nationalize some of the Senkaku/Daioyutai Islands occurred—is paying
a visit to China.
His visit to the memorial to victims of the Nanjing Massacre
was front page news in Chinese state media, especially since he marked his
visit with the sort of respectful bow that is usually associated with the obeisance paid to Japanese war dead by Japanese prime ministers. For good measure, Xinhua also photographed Mr. Hatoyama observing a photograph of a Japanese soldier preparing to decapitate a Chinese prisoner.
The Xinhua headline read: Former Japan’s PM Apologizes for War Crimes in China.
Not by accident, this relatively abject episode (which, if
carried out by a current or former United States leaderwould have been
excoriated as a capitulationist apology tour) occurred while current Prime
Minister Abe was preoccupying the Japanese media with his largely symbolic
defiance tour of Southeast Asia, ostensibly including an unwelcome security
component but more concretely advertising the benefit to all concerned of
economic ties that are not dependent on the pleasure of the PRC.
But, to the PRC at least, the willingness of Japan to make
some kind of concession to cool things down is noted and, thankfully, welcome.
Xinhua also ran a report on a meeting between Hatoyama and
Jia Qinglin, at which nice and conciliatory words were spoken:
"The two sides should handle the Diaoyu Islands dispute properly in order to ensure that bilateral relations remain on a track of healthy and stable development," said Jia, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), while meeting with former Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama.
Jia said cooperation between China and Japan will serve the fundamental interests of both sides, as well as the region and the international community.
China attaches importance to its ties with Japan and will continue to work to develop bilateral relations in accordance with previous agreements, Jia said.
In meetings with the U.S. team of superpundits and retired
diplomats (i.e. the Nye/Steinberg/Armitage/Hadley mission to Japan and PRC in
October 2011 that attempted to apply U.S. good offices to resolve the dispute—something
that the PRC, whose entire purpose in milking the Senkaku/Diaoyutai crisis was
to convince Japan of the conditional, equivocal, and partial character of US
support embodied in the pivot, had no interest in encouraging), the PRC reportedly
shifted the frame away from China’s eternal claim to the islands to the
seemingly tangential question of Japan trying to shed the moral and diplomatic burden
of World War II.
Peter Ennis interviewed Professor Nye and posted the
transcript on his blog, Dispatch Japan.
In one exchange:
NYE: Chinese regard Japan as having changed the status quo by having the central government purchase the islands from the private owner. China has not accepted Prime Minister Noda’s public explanation that he took that step to prevent Governor Ishihara from having the Tokyo municipality purchase the islands, which could have caused mischief.
The Chinese think there is a large plan by Japan to erode what they call “the outcome” of World War II. I don’t know how much of that is pure rhetoric, or represents the real thinking in China. But that is what senior Chinese say.
DISPATCH JAPAN: What is your assessment? Is it rhetoric, or real thinking?
NYE: I think a lot of Chinese really believe that Japan is trying to erode the status quo. I think others are using that line in an effort to create a wedge between the US and Japan.
Shifting the focus to the big question of World War II is a
better way of improving relations than arguing over the Senkaku/Diaoyutai
Islands. The island dispute is zero sum:
either they are China’s or Japan’s.
On the other hand, fortunately, a significant portion of
Japan elite opinion can still agree with the PRC that World War II was a bad
thing. A climbdown for Japan is easier
and allows the PRC to claim a moral victory.
Mr. Hatoyama’s participation in the Nanjing shaming ceremony
will hopefully be enough to smooth things over for now:
"The Japanese government had made it clear when signing the Treaty of San Francisco 1951 that it accepted the verdicts of the Far Eastern International Military Court of Justice and others verdicts regarding its war crimes," Zhu said.
It will be interesting to see how the Japanese media covers
Hatoyama’s visit.
Whether or not the de-escalation of the crisis in
Japan-China relations through Mr. Hatoyama’s visit represents Japan’s
abandonment of its ideas of shedding the incubus of World War II and entering
the brave new world of the 21st century, where Japan jettisons its
peacetime constitution, rebrands its “self defence forces” as a conventional
military and, maybe assembles a few atomic bombs from its large stash of
plutonium and mounts them on its space rockets is an open question.
Actually, it’s really not an open question.
Japan will probably draw the conclusion that China that
Chinese desire to confront and humiliate Japan will remain, and will muscle up
in response.
Ironically, this may be the endgame that the PRC was looking
for.
If Japan continues with its accelerated military investment
and practices an even more independent security policy, the credibility of the
United States--safe to say, the only military power the PRC really cares about—as
the guarantor of security in East Asia, specifically as the force restraining
Japanese rearmament, is eroded.
The key takeaway from the Senkaku/Daioyutai crisis is that
the Japanese government, in large response to domestic imperatives, undertook a
regional security adventure without the enthusiastic support of the United
States. China escalated the crisis,
rejected US mediation, and forced Japan to address the situation bilaterally,
at first through the deployment of its military forces and now diplomatically.
The crisis revealed a small but significant chink of
daylight between Japan and the United States.
That makes it likely that the PRC will be happy to return to
the fraught issue of the islands again, whenever it wants to reveal and
encourage the centripetal forces implicit in the US pivot to Asia.
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