Relations with Japan could worsen, envoy warns
Strained Sino-Japanese relations could worsen further if Tokyo continues to treat Beijing as a rival and fails to turn around increasingly hostile public opinion, the Chinese envoy to Japan has warned.
In a virtual speech to more than 100 Japanese entrepreneurs, ambassador Kong Xuanyou indicated Beijing’s frustration with the administration of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida over its close alignment with Washington on China.
“If some people in Japan are obsessed with a narrow geopolitical vision and the Cold War mentality of confrontation between camps, they will naturally dislike China and regard China as a threat or even an enemy, and embark on the wrong path of pitting itself against its neighbours,” Kong said, according to a statement on the embassy website.
The state of bilateral ties was “far from ideal, with prominent issues both old and new intertwined with each other”, Kong told a seminar hosted by the Japan-China Investment Promotion Organisation to mark the 50th anniversary of the normalisation of Sino-Japanese relations.
“We are at a crossroads where we either forge ahead or retreat,” he warned.
Beijing initially viewed Kishida, who came to power last October, as more dovish than his conservative predecessors Yoshihide Suga and Shinzo Abe. But nearly seven months into his term, bilateral ties have shown few signs of improvement, with Tokyo edging closer to Washington in its alliance-based approach to counter China’s rise.
Bilateral exchanges have largely been suspended.
Kishida spoke to President Xi Jinping only once over the telephone since he took office.
Earlier this week, Japan followed the United States and Australia in sending a delegation to the Solomon Islands, to voice concerns about the Pacific nation’s security pact with China amid fears about building a Chinese military base there.
Tokyo has also played a pivotal role in Washington’s Chinafocused Indo-Pacific strategy and the Quad, a US-led four-way grouping with India and Australia slammed by Beijing as an “Asian Nato”.
In his speech, Kong took issue with “deep ideological prejudice in Japanese public opinion” towards China and made a veiled swipe at the US.
“There are fewer positive voices promoting cooperation, but more negative views advocating toughness against China. It can be attributed to misunderstanding and misperceptions of China in Japan, but it is to a large extent due to external influences,” he said.
Kong listed three main areas he believed had seen Tokyo move towards an increasingly antagonistic approach on Beijing, namely, how to view their different political systems; how to balance competition and cooperation; and how to assess China’s role in the world.
Beijing’s top diplomat to Japan also sought to play down growing concerns about China’s authoritarian turn at home and diplomatic assertiveness abroad, portraying the country as a benign, responsible power on global affairs, including on the Ukraine war.
He dismissed growing criticism, mostly from the West, of China’s self-claimed neutral stand on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and lashed out at similar attempts in Japan to compare China and Russia and use the Ukraine crisis to advocate support for Taiwan.
The Chinese foreign ministry has condemned Abe on several occasions over his recent appeals for the US to drop its decades-old strategic ambiguity on the defence of self-ruled Taiwan.
We are at a crossroads where we either forge ahead or retreat
AMBASSADOR KONG XUANYOU