The Post

Islands dispute may end in war – expert

With power in the balance inside both countries, neither Japan nor China can back down over a disputed island chain, reports Malcolm Moore in Beijing.

-

A MILITARY conflict between China and Japan is looming, with neither willing to back down over a disputed chain of islands, one of China’s leading foreign policy experts has warned.

The spat over the Diaoyu or Senkaku Islands has escalated dramatical­ly in the past month with violent protests in China. But with a national election approachin­g in Japan, and a change of leadership in China, politician­s on both sides have refused to step back from the brink, afraid of appearing weak.

‘‘There is a danger of China and Japan having a military conflict,’’ said Yan Xuetong, one of China’s most influentia­l foreign policy strategist­s and a noted hawk.

‘‘I do not see either side making concession­s. Both sides want to solve the situation peacefully but neither side can provide the right approach.’’ Yan warned that unless one side backed down, there could be a repeat of the Falklands conflict in Asia.

‘‘Generally speaking, according to the theory of internatio­nal relations, unless one country makes concession­s to the other, the escalation of a conflict between two countries will not stop until there is a military clash, like between the UK and Argentina,’’ he said.

He said China was tolerant with smaller powers.

‘‘But the case of Japan is different. There is history between us. ‘‘Japan is a big power. ‘‘It regards itself as a regional and sometimes a world power.

‘‘So China can very naturally regard Japan as an equal.

‘‘And if we are equal, you cannot poke us. You cannot make a mistake,’’ he said.

Yan is the dean of internatio­nal relations at Tsinghua University, the elite college that schooled both China’s President, Hu Jintao, and his likely successor, Xi Jinping.

He is also one of China’s representa­tives to the Council of Security Co-operation in the AsiaPacifi­c, a non-government­al body that co-ordinates security in the region. Chinese and Japanese diplomats had talks this week but no agreement was reached.

Yesterday the Chinese foreign ministry attacked Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda for telling reporters at the United Nations that the islands belonged to Japan. Noda said: ‘‘There are no territoria­l issues as such.

‘‘Therefore, there cannot be any compromise that represents a retreat from this position.’’

A Chinese foreign ministry in reply said: ‘‘China is strongly disappoint­ed and sternly opposes the Japanese leader’s obstinacy regarding his wrong position on the Diaoyu Islands issue.’’

In the balance is billions of dollars in bilateral trade. Last year, exports to China accounted for 3 per cent of the Japanese economy.

Several Japanese businesses on the Chinese mainland have had to shut down because of the crisis.

Nissan, which relies on the Chinese market for as much as 25 per cent of its revenues, has closed until October 7 after demand for its cars plummeted.

All Nippon Airways said 40,000 reservatio­ns had been cancelled on flights between China and Japan from this month to November.

Yan predicted that if there was a military confrontat­ion, the United States would not intervene physically.

‘‘I do not think they will send soldiers to fight against the People’s Liberation Army,’’ he said. ‘‘They [the US] will be involved but they can be involved in many different ways, providing intelligen­ce, ammunition, political support, logistical help and so on.’’

He expected whoever wins the US presidenti­al election to continue to toughen policy on China.

‘‘In terms of the economy, China and the US are partners.

‘‘But in terms of security, they are rivals. American hegemony is based on military capability and the military gap with China.

‘‘When China narrows that gap, it will scare the US,’’ he said.

China increasing­ly needed to change the ideology that guided its foreign policy, namely to focus on the economy and not take a leading role in internatio­nal relations, Yan said.

 ??  ?? Specks in the sea: Coveted by both China and Japan, the disputed islands could be the key to great wealth.
Specks in the sea: Coveted by both China and Japan, the disputed islands could be the key to great wealth.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand