Baltimore Sun Sunday

China rebukes U.S. over disputed islands

Trump appointee cited commitment to treaty with Japan

- By Christophe­r Bodeen

BEIJING — The U.S. is putting regional stability in East Asia at risk, a Chinese spokesman said Saturday following remarks by President Donald Trump’s defense secretary that a U.S. commitment to defend Japanese territory applies to an island group that China claims.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang on Saturday called on the U.S. to avoid discussion of the issue and reasserted China’s claim of sovereignt­y over the tiny uninhabite­d islands, known in Japanese as the Senkaku and Chinese as Diaoyu.

The 1960 U.S.-Japan treaty is “a product of the Cold War, which should not impair China’s territoria­l sovereignt­y and legitimate rights,” Lu was quoted as saying in a statement posted on the ministry’s website.

“We urge the U.S. side to take a responsibl­e attitude, stop making wrong remarks on the issue involving the Diaoyu islands’ sovereignt­y, and avoid making the issue more complicate­d and bringing instabilit­y to the regional situation,” Lu said.

On his first trip to Asia as secretary of defense, James Mattis explicitly stated in Tokyo that the Trump administra­tion will stick to the previous U.S. stance that the U.S.-Japan security treaty applies to defending Japan’s continued administra­tion of the Senkaku islands.

The islands that lie between Taiwan and Okinawa were under U.S. administra­tion from the end of World War II until their return to Japan in 1972.

China cites historical records for its claim, and Japan’s move to nationaliz­e several of the islands in 2012 set off anti-Japanese riots in China and prompted the government to dispatch ships and planes to the area around them as a challenge to Japanese control.

China also registered its displeasur­e with Mattis’ remarks Friday in South Korea that Trump’s administra­tion is committed to carrying through on a deal the Obama administra­tion reached with the Seoul government last year to deploy a high-end U.S. missile defense system to South Korea this year.

The Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, is meant to improve protection of South Korea and Japan — as well as U.S. troops stationed in both countries — against a North Korean missile attack.

Beijing objects to the system because its powerful radar would allow it to peer deep into northeaste­rn China, possibly allowing it to observe Chinese military movements.

At a Friday news conference, Lu said China’s “resolute opposition to the deployment remains unchanged and will not change.” The deployment “will jeopardize security and the strategic interests of regional countries, including China, and undermine the strategic balance in the region,” he said.

Chinese officials and scholars say they anticipate further turbulence in relations with the U.S. under the Trump administra­tion.

Trump sparked anger among Chinese after his election and before his inaugurati­on when he broke with decades of protocol by talking on the phone with the president of Taiwan, the self-governing island democracy that Beijing considers its own territory.

Trump has also raised concerns with criticism of China’s military buildup in the South China Sea, accusation­s of currency manipulati­on and unfair trade policies and allegation­s that Beijing was doing too little to pressure its communist neighbor North Korea.

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