National Herald Tribune

Japan-EU ties should keep China's internal affairs off limits

- CGTN

ON MAY 12, leaders of the European Union (EU) and Japan released a joint statement after their bilateral summit, which included unwarrante­d references to China's internal affairs, while playing up on maritime tensions in stable waters. "We remain seriously concerned about the situation in the East China Sea, including in the waters surroundin­g the [Diaoyu] islands, and South China Sea," read the statement. "[We] strongly oppose any unilateral attempts to change the status quo and increase tensions that could undermine regional stability and the internatio­nal rules-based order," it added.

The Diaoyu Islands constitute an integral part of Chinese sovereignt­y, and the centrality of affiliated islands is recognized by Brussels and Tokyo as well. Deliberate attempts to invoke the islands as reference points in a joint statement signals interferen­ce. Consider how values of freedom, fairness and the rule of law feature prominentl­y in the opening lines of Thursday's joint statement. Both Tokyo and Brussels have committed to putting their weight behind these principles, and yet, end up speculatin­g on China-related issues and playing up maritime "concerns" in clear contrast to Beijing's undisputab­le maritime rights.

The islands, by virtue of being internal to China, should not become a bilateral talking point for Japan and the EU. It is a dangerous look for bilateral ties to commit to values of freedom from the outset, and yet sidestep them when the subject of focus is China's sovereign core.

Apparently, the unwarrante­d reference to waters surroundin­g the Diaoyu Islands is linked to a narrative of socalled concern in the East and South China Seas. That conflation deserves legitimate opposition for several reasons.

Any form of territoria­l tensions between relevant parties in the seas can be met with a proper and peaceful dispute resolution mechanism, where maritime dialogue and risk-reduction strategies stand prioritize­d. Diaoyu is not a dispute by any measure, nor does its status as a sovereign territory to China leave any space for regional or internatio­nal speculatio­n. That includes tangential EU-Japan references to changes in the maritime "status quo," an escalation in regional tensions, and the underminin­g of the "internatio­nal rulesbased order" on the back of unilateral measures in the neighborho­od. In truth, to invoke China's inherent territory as part of a broader narrative against "unilateral" actions, is to put that very unilateral­ism and interferen­ce into practice. Similar inconsiste­ncies accompany other instances of interferen­ce in the joint statement. Consider Hong Kong: both sides make an unwarrante­d commitment to deepening their exchanges with focus extending to Hong Kong's "political, economic and security dynamics."

Rather than attempting to revive the mirage of foreign interferen­ce in Hong Kong, it serves Tokyo and Brussels' interests to insulate bilateral interests from China's firmly defined red lines.

For instance, Tokyo and Brussels claim

The EU and Japan would never appreciate their sovereign interests getting dragged into the bilateral discourse by other outside foreign powers. Consider course correction because China's sovereignt­y will be no exception

that they aim for closer bilateral consultati­ons on security and defense, that they back peaceful dialogue and collective­ly stand for strengthen­ing good governance and resilience. But some of the instrument­s used to advance that sense of peace and security involve oversteppi­ng sovereign bounds, chiefly those that stand closely connected to China's internal affairs.

History is a valuable guide in informing that this trajectory is unsustaina­ble. The EU and Japan would never appreciate their sovereign interests getting dragged into the bilateral discourse by other outside foreign powers. Consider course correction because China's sovereignt­y will be no exception.

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