China Daily

Small-clique politics draws stiff opposition

US-Japan alliance should not undermine peace and stability in region, Beijing says

- By JIANG XUEQING in Tokyo and MO JINGXI in Beijing Contact the writers at jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn.

The relationsh­ip between the United States and Japan should not target any other countries, harm their interests or undermine the peace and stability of the region, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning said on Thursday, emphasizin­g China’s strong opposition to small-clique politics.

The remarks came after the allies attacked and smeared China on the Taiwan question, and maritime and other issues during a summit in Washington on Wednesday, where US President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida unveiled plans to strengthen their alliance.

“In disregard of China’s severe concerns, the US and Japan grossly interfered in China’s internal affairs and seriously violated the basic norms governing internatio­nal relations,” Mao told reporters at a regular news briefing in Beijing.

Mao said China strongly opposes the attempts to form small circles motivated by the Cold War mentality, as well as words and deeds that stoke and aggravate conflict and undermine other countries’ strategic security and interests.

The spokeswoma­n refuted the distortion of truth and facts about China in a joint leaders’ statement issued after Biden and Kishida’s meeting, saying it is the US and Japan that are posing a real threat to regional peace and stability.

Mao said that China’s activities in the East and South China Seas are in full compliance with internatio­nal law and beyond reproach. “China has indisputab­le sovereignt­y over islands in the South China Sea and their adjacent waters.”

The spokeswoma­n also pushed back Biden and Kishida’s concern over China’s nuclear policy, saying it’s nothing but a false narrative that is unfounded and ill-intended.

As China has pledged “no first use” of nuclear weapons and not to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear weapon states or nuclear-weaponfree zones, Mao said those who do not use nuclear weapons against China have nothing to worry about.

On the contrary, the internatio­nal community has every reason to be concerned about Washington’s expanded cooperatio­n with its allies to develop advanced military technologi­es given that the US “possesses the biggest and most advanced nuclear arsenal in the world”, she added.

As the US and Japan announced a significan­t upgrade of their military alliance, insightful individual­s in Japan and China are urging Tokyo to reexamine its positionin­g on SinoJapane­se relations, correct its mistaken understand­ing of security, and avoid returning to the path of war.

Huang Xingyuan, representa­tive director of China at the Japan-China Friendship Center, said the US is continuous­ly drawing closer to Japan.

According to Huang, Japan is also actively approachin­g or even binding itself to the “Indo-Pacific strategy” of the US, or what is referred to as a strategy of containmen­t against China. He believes that this trend is worth vigilance.

Risk of tensions

The notable upgrade of the US-Japan alliance has raised apprehensi­on around the risk of escalating tensions in the Asia-Pacific region.

“The upgraded Japan-US alliance is highly targeted. This is based on Japan wrongly positionin­g China as its challenge and threat. Japan has introduced measures under the guise of security to ensure ‘absolute security’, which may lead to new instabilit­y and new dangers,” Huang said.

The doubts of the Japanese authoritie­s about China’s developmen­t, the positionin­g of Sino-Japanese relations, and the mistaken understand­ing of security have led to its current actions, he said.

Japanese citizens held a rally in Tokyo on Tuesday, opposing their government’s expansion of military power. The people harbor a strong sense of crisis that the strengthen­ing of the Japan-US alliance will lead to war.

Shunkichi Takayama, a lawyer in Tokyo, said he feels like the start of an invasive war is approachin­g, which is something that Japanese citizens absolutely cannot allow.

Reflecting on Japanese history, Takayama said he feels like the country is stepping onto a dangerous path that it must never tread upon.

Cheng Yonghua, former Chinese ambassador to Japan, stressed that the Japan-US security treaty cannot replace the Treaty of Peace and Friendship Between China and Japan.

The Japan-US security treaty is a product of the Cold War, he said, and in the post-Cold War era, the alignment of the two countries against third parties does not conform to the current internatio­nal order, he added.

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