The Independent

Fear of Trump brings rivals China and Japan together

US trade war creates stronger ties, reports Isabel Reynolds

- Additional reporting by Peter Martin and Emi Nobuhiro

When Shinzo Abe took office six years ago it would’ve been unthinkabl­e for China’s leaders to roll out the red carpet for him. The Japanese prime minister can thank US President Donald Trump for the turnaround.

Abe heads to Beijing this week to celebrate the 40th anniversar­y of a peace-and-friendship treaty between the Asian powerhouse­s, which have a long history of bad blood due in part to Japan’s colonial invasions of China and atrocities committed during World War Two. He’ll meet Chinese President Xi Jinping tomorrow as part of the first bilateral visit by a Japanese leader in seven years.

A slow warming of ties between the neighbours has accelerate­d after both found themselves under attack

from Trump on trade. Although Japan’s alliance with the US keeps the nation in lockstep with Washington on most geopolitic­al issues, Abe has moved to shore up economic ties with China – its biggest trading partner. Xi, in turn, sees Japan as a way to mitigate the risk of a trade war with the US.

“Economic and trade cooperatio­n is the ballast and propeller of the China-Japan relationsh­ip, laying the keystone for mutual political trust,” Chinese Ministry of Commerce spokesman Gao Feng said last week.

Abe is preparing to bring a 500-strong business delegation with him to discuss cooperatio­n, as pledged during Chinese premier Li Keqiang’s visit to Japan in May. The two sides will look to revive a currency swap framework dormant since 2013 and possibly progress towards an agreement on loans of giant pandas, according to media reports.

Economic and trade cooperatio­n is the ballast and propeller of the China-Japan relationsh­ip

They are also both pushing for a quick conclusion to Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Agreement, a trade deal involving 16 countries in the Asia-Pacific. The South China Morning Post reported earlier this month that Beijing was also looking into joining the successor to the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, which Japan pushed to complete after Trump pulled out.

Abe vowed in a speech to parliament yesterday to raise the relationsh­ip with China to a higher level through regular leaders’ visits and business cooperatio­n.

“We haven’t solved our problems with Japan,” said Gui Yongtao, an associate professor at Peking University’s School of Internatio­nal Studies, who specialise­s in Chinese-Japanese relations. “But these are much less prioritise­d compared to the US risk. We still don’t know what will happen with US policy towards China.”

Still, for all the goodwill, formidable historical barriers remain to improved ties – none bigger now than territoria­l disputes.

Tensions flared in 2012, the year Abe took power, when Japan bought part of an uninhabite­d chain of East China Sea islets disputed with Beijing, sparking sometimes violent protests in China and making relations arguably their most hostile since World War Two. The islands are known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China.

We haven’t solved our Japan problems. But these are much less prioritise­d compared to the US risk

Ships from both countries continue to chase one another around the area, with Japan making a formal protest over a Chinese incursion into what Japan considers its territoria­l waters just last week, according to broadcaste­r NHK. For its part, Japan held military drills involving a submarine last month in the South China Sea, a body of water where China has extensive territoria­l claims.

Defence chiefs from China and Japan last week agreed on more military exchanges and a hotline to avoid unintended clashes. But at their first meeting in three years, Japanese defence minister Takeshi Iwaya also criticised China over its activities in the South China Sea, and another Japanese government official said there would be no real improvemen­t with China unless tensions further north in the East China Sea stabilise.

Territoria­l issues are a major reason why the Japanese public has one of the world’s most negative views of China, according to Pew Research Centre. Even as China’s impression of Japan has recovered from the 2012 crisis, thanks partly to tourism, the Japanese have remained wary.

Yuichiro Tamaki, the leader of a main opposition party, said even some younger lawmakers in Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party are cautious about the relationsh­ip. “There are few in the younger generation who want to be friendly with China,” Tamaki said in an interview, adding that his own party favoured linking up with Beijing when appropriat­e.

And while Japan has been critical of Trump’s policy of slapping tariffs on China, Abe’s government shares some US concerns on trade and investment. Japanese Trade Minister Hiroshige Seko, who will join the trip, is working with the US and Europe on proposals to address problems caused by state enterprise­s and forced technology transfers. Even so, Abe’s visit cements a general warming of ties – and opens the door for Xi to visit Japan as soon as next year.

“Nobody thinks ties with China have completely recovered, and they shouldn’t think that,” said Kunihiko Miyake, a former Japanese diplomat and now visiting professor at Ritsumeika­n University. “We’re now in an era where having both sides make an effort to keep friction to a minimum is what we have to call good ties.”

 ?? (Reuters) ?? Chinese premier Li Keqiang (left) met Japan’s leader Shinzo Abe
(Reuters) Chinese premier Li Keqiang (left) met Japan’s leader Shinzo Abe

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