The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

China’s provocatio­ns near Senkaku Islands have become unwanted norm

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

Sunday marked 10 years since the Japanese government nationaliz­ed the Senkaku Islands in 2012. Over that time, China has been accelerati­ng its maritime advances, with provocativ­e acts by China Coast Guard vessels becoming common around the islands.

Tensions are not likely to ease anytime soon, casting a shadow over efforts to improve bilateral relations between the two countries, which will soon mark the 50th anniversar­y of the normalizat­ion of their diplomatic ties.

STANDOFF

In the early morning hours of July 5, a ship called the Zuiho Maru approached Uotsuri Island — one of the Senkaku Islands — in Ishigaki, Okinawa Prefecture. e vessel, with a gross tonnage of 9.7 tons, was operated by a 50-year-old sherman from Yonaguni in the prefecture.

e shadows of two huge ships, CCG vessels of the several thousand-ton class, emerged from the darkness. e ships had intruded into Japan’s territoria­l waters and hemmed in the Zuiho Maru, bringing themselves within a few hundred meters of the shing boat.

en, a Japan Coast Guard patrol ship wedged itself between the vessels, with a “stando ” continuing for some time. e CCG ships stayed in Japan’s territoria­l waters for 64 hours and 17 minutes, the longest continuous time there by such vessels since the islands were nationaliz­ed.

e sherman was angry, saying in recent years he has been followed by CCG ships more o en than ever before. “China has gotten serious about taking over the Senkakus. Why should we have to worry about China when we’re shing in Japan’s rich waters?” he said.

REINFORCIN­G READINESS

Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno told a press conference on Sept. 9 that “the situation remains unpredicta­ble and we are extremely concerned,” referring to the July intrusion.

In April 2012, then Tokyo Gov. Shintaro Ishihara announced his intention to purchase the Senkaku Islands from private landowners. is prompted the Noda administra­tion of the Democratic Party of Japan to nationaliz­e the islands in September that year.

China reacted with fury. According to the JCG, the number of Chinese government vessels trespassin­g in Japan’s territoria­l waters went from just one between 2009 and 2011, to 23 in 2012.

The following year, in 2013, the number reached a high of 52 and has remained at around 20-30 per year since then. CCG vessels sailed within the contiguous zone, which extends approximat­ely 22 kilometers outside territoria­l waters, on more than 300 days a year in both 2020 and 2021.

e Japanese government has been increasing the number of JCG patrol vessels and deploying Self-Defense Force units to the Nansei Islands, which span Kyushu and Okinawa Prefecture.

However, China has also greatly strengthen­ed its readiness.

e CCG was establishe­d in 2013 through the combinatio­n of four organizati­ons, including the State Oceanic Administra­tion. It was incorporat­ed in 2018 into China’s Armed Police Force. In 2021, China put into force the Maritime Police Law, which allows the use of weapons on vessels belonging to the CCG when its sovereignt­y is infringed, thus further heightenin­g tensions at the scene.

DIALOGUE UNCERTAIN

e Japanese government has been seeking to ease tensions with China through foreign ministeria­l and summit-level dialogue before the 50th anniversar­y of the normalizat­ion of diplomatic relations between Japan and China on Sept. 29.

However, the outlook is uncertain. A Japan-China foreign ministeria­l meeting scheduled for early August in Cambodia was canceled due to a visit to Taiwan by the U.S. Speaker of the House of Representa­tives.

China has been ramping up its activities in the skies, too. In March this year, an unmanned surveillan­ce aircraft flew over Japan’s air defense identifica­tion zone north of the Senkakus, and Japan responded by scrambling Air Self-Defense Force fighter jets.

A er Russia invaded Ukraine, China’s joint actions with the Russian military have also become prominent.

e Chinese side has not relaxed its strategy of continuing its activities in the waters surroundin­g the Senkakus and trying to make its presence an establishe­d fact.

A senior Foreign Ministry o cial said, “We have no choice but to continue our e orts to communicat­e between the two countries at various levels, including summit meetings while working to ease tensions.” (Sept. 13)

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