LDP’s Pro-China Wing Fires
Back at Abe; More Yeast for the Nikkei; and More Confusion About the Ryukyus
It always seemed likely
that, back in the Deng Xiaoping days, the PRC and Japan were eager to cut a
deal for normalization of relations and, therefore, both sides would agree to
put the Senkaku issue on the backburner.
The “set aside the Senkakus”
sentiment was certainly the governing spirit at a press conference during Deng’s
1978 visit to Japan, as Ezra Vogel’s biography of Deng records (pg. 304 of the ebook):
When a
reporter asked about the ownership of the Senkaku Islands, the audience became
tense, but Deng replied that the Chinese and Japanese held different views, had
different names for the islands, and should put the issue aside so that later
generations, who would be wiser than those present, could solve the
problem. The audience was visibly
impressed…
In the amicable context of
1978, “putting the issue aside” would appear to mean “let’s discuss it later”
which puts the issue well down the slippery slope of “an issue that can be
discussed/an issue for discussion/an issue that is open to negotiation”.
Apparently, there wasn’t any
public confirmation that this spirit informed the actual Sino-Japanese
discussions behind closed doors.
Until now.
In an interesting
development, a China-friendly LDP elder decided to go public with his recollections
of the Japanese attitude toward the Senkakus during the period of normalization
under Tanaka and Deng, in an apparent effort to restore the islands’ status as
a topic of engagement rather than an excuse for self-righteous belligerence.
This creates some
awkwardness for the Abe government, which has hung its hat on the position that
the Senkakus have always and indubitably (at least since 1895 and disregarding
the 1945-1952 hiatus of US occupation) belonged to Japan, the sovereignty
of the sacred rocks has never been debased by inclusion in the greasy diplomatic
dealings between Japan and China, we can do anything we want with them, if you want to talk about the Senkakus,
talk to the hand, buster.
Reawakening memories of the
time when discussions relating to the Senkakus were a matter of mutual amity
probably also reflects the fact that the Chinese government is getting anxious
about the downward spiral of PRC-Japan relations—and Prime Minister Abe’s
success in building anti-China relationships with India, Vietnam, et. al.—and is
interested in appearing less confrontational.
The Chinese charm offensive
also includes a full-court press of high level cordiality at the Shangri-La
defense confab and a rather frantic cozying up to the United States (including
a request for the early Xi-Obama Sunnyland
summit and, to sweeten the pot, more than the usual expressions of
impatience with North Korea).
This gives President Obama
at degree of leverage over the PRC that he has not enjoyed in the past.
The USA will take advantage
of this favorable situation by forcibly torqueing Xi’s testicles on the matter
of “cyberwarfare” and cyberespionage.
It will be interesting to see
if President Obama also exploits China’s accommodating posture to “rebalance”
the Pacific situation by tilting a little more toward China and away from
Japan, or contents himself with a zero-sum win on cyber stuff.
Senkaku row shelved in ’70s: Nonaka
Kyodo
Jun 5, 2013 BEIJING – In a new ripple to Japan’s assertion of ownership of the disputed Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea, former chief Cabinet Secretary Hiromu Nonaka said leaders from Japan and China had agreed to shelve the territory row when the two countries normalized relations in the early 1970s.
The remark by the former Liberal Democratic heavyweight, a disciple of the late Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka, who cut the normalization deal with Beijing in 1972, contradicts the government’s official stance that there was no such agreement at the time.
Nonaka, who is leading a delegation of current and former Diet members on a visit to China, told reporters Monday, “Just after the normalization of relations, I was told clearly by then-Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka that a decision was made on the normalization by shelving the Senkaku issue.
“As a living witness, I would like to make clear (what I heard),” Nonaka said after meeting in Beijing with Liu Yunshan, the fifth-ranked leader of the Chinese Communist Party.
Liu is said to have told the delegation that Japan is responsible for the current confrontation with China. Apparently aiming to have Japan acknowledge at least the existence of a bilateral territorial dispute, Liu also reportedly said he hopes to see a solution reached through dialogue between the two governments.
In Tokyo, top officials reiterated the government’s view that the Senkakus are not an issue Japan should put on the shelf since no territorial dispute exists.
“There is no truth (to the remark) that (Japan) agreed with China to shelve or maintain the status quo of the Senkaku Islands,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said, reiterating Tokyo’s position that no territorial dispute exists.
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida also repeated the same line: “It is not the case that to this day, we have agreed to shelve (the dispute), nor has there been a territorial dispute that should be shelved in the first place.”
Bubble Bubble Toil &
Trouble
Looks like Prime Minister
Abe is preparing additional bubbliciousness for the Nikkei and, perhaps, lucky
stock exchanges in emerging markets:
Japan's
government is set to urge the nation's public pension funds - a pool of over $2
trillion - to increase their investment in equities and overseas assets as part
of a growth strategy being readied by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, according to
people with knowledge of the policy shift.
It seems that the Japanese government is
going to make sure the Japanese stock market stays propped up by artificial
means, at least until the Japanese economy restructures into that
senior-citizen-fueled growth engine we've been told about, or the smart money cashes out, whichever
comes first.
Hmmm. Should I be buying the Nikkei? shorting it?...or both?
Hmmm. Should I be buying the Nikkei? shorting it?...or both?
Somebody Else Is Badly
Confused About the China/Okinawa Issue
But it’s not AFP.
Can anybody tease out the
contradiction of this headline from on line news site Japan Today:
And the lede from the accompanying article, sourced from
AFP?
A top Chinese general
on Sunday sought to distance the country from claims by some of its scholars
that the Ryukyu Islands, which include Okinawa, do not belong to Japan.
I hate to admit it, but this qualifies as supporting
evidence for the “blogsites have lower standards than traditional news outlets”
slam.
Japan Today is also guilty of not policing its Wikipedia
entry which is a total rip job by somebody who obviously totally completely
hates Japan Today.
Claims of Universal Expertise
Japan Today staff has been known to employ underhanded tactics to prevent criticisms of media incompetence. Often times they will intentionally ignore new or existing information and state that the only truth is their stance. They claim they are experts in all fields, including law, engineering, psychology, and politics.
…which, comes to think of it, also supports the “Wikipedia
content can’t be trusted” slam.
Recently, the founder of Japan Today (no longer involved in
operations) showed up on the Talk page to criticize the entry but, as of this
writing, it’s still up there in all its glory.
On the other hand, for a good piece of bloginess on the Ryukyu/Okinawa issue,
here’s a link to something I wrote on the LDP's Okinawa problem--and China's pleasure in stirring the pot.
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