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Abe ups the ante, calls China's gas field development a 'clear violation'

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Abe ups the ante, calls China's gas field development a 'clear violation'

July 07, 2013

THE ASAHI SHIMBUN
With his party comfortably ahead in opinion polls, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is showing more confidence in taking a tougher stance against China.

For the first time, Abe referred to a new Chinese project in the East China Sea as “a clear violation” of a 2008 agreement between Japan and China for joint development of gas fields.

Until now, Japan’s official stance was more cautious; it asked Beijing to return to the spirit of the 2008 agreement. Japanese officials were concerned that a more assertive position could provoke China into all but voiding that agreement.

Abe’s harsher comment, made on a TV program on July 5, could potentially turn the gas field development issue into a contentious one similar to the territorial dispute over the Senkaku Islands.

“Since an agreement was reached not to monopolize the resources but to use them for the sake of both nations, I hope China will comply,” Abe said on the TV program.

Japan and China in 2008 agreed to jointly develop the gas field called Shirakaba by Japan and Chunxiao by China. The agreement also called for further discussions on early joint development of other gas fields in the East China Sea near the Japan-China median line.

Shortly before the agreement was reached, the two leaders at the time, Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and Hu Jintao, president of China, confirmed that the East China Sea should be an area of friendship.

Japan recently lodged a protest after it confirmed that China was working on a new project in the area covered by the 2008 agreement.

At a July 3 news conference, Hua Chunying, a spokeswoman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said, “There is no change in our stance that joint development should be sought.”

However, she stopped short of referring to China’s new project, an indication that Beijing was taking the position of conducting its own development while acknowledging the existence of the 2008 agreement.

Abe’s more critical comment could be seen as an attempt to prevent Beijing from taking further action that ignores the agreement.

Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party appears set to win a landslide victory in the July 21 Upper House election, which would make it easier for his administration to pursue its policies through the Diet.

But Japan’s relations with China and South Korea remain strained due mainly to sovereignty claims over islands and interpretations of history, particularly events during World War II.

The Japan-China feud over the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea has led to the suspension of talks on joint development of the gas fields.

China has called on Japan to create an environment for resuming those discussions, underscoring the wide gap between the two nations on the issue.
 
. . . .
You seem so happy.

Looking forward to Japan's annihilation, eh???
 
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China can and will do what she pleases in her maritime territories:

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Gas field develoment in the ECS is in full swing。:cheers:
 
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Millions of Filipinos were slaughtered by the Japs in WWII,yet primitives like you seem to have a short memory and are kissing the azz of Japs’ even though they hold you in contempt。:azn:

I suggest you watch Japanese TV dramas or travelogues and see how you lot are despised。:)

They already get used to it, you know, Spanish, American, Japanese... this is just normal for them. And they even built a monument for those Imperial Kamikaze for attracting Japanese tourists. As if the Manila Massacre never happened.
 
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Japanese finally wakeup, and this teach other nations not to joint development with disgrace china, never trust those swindler Chinese.
 
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Why does china break agreedmends that were made 2008?
Or does china want to provocate japan?
 
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Wow great guys keep it up :yay:

We Chinese people are good,
MingChina is the most powerful country,
But they they never invade someone else.

Some people who threaten to use nuclear weapons,
Does not represent us.

You can see his head, not the Han nationality.
He wants to destroy our HanChina image.
 
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China's East China Sea Gas Exploration Latest Flare-Up In Japan-China Senkaku/Diaoyu Island Dispute - Forbes

You can read this article. Abe lied again:

Prime Minister Abe Shinzo’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)/New Komeito (NK) coalition is certain to will a huge victory in the July 21 Diet House of Councillors election. Abe will surely win a majority of seats and could reach the two-thirds level that would facilitate his plan to amend Japan’s (U.S. written) “Peace Constitution.”

The election campaign is now in full swing throughout the country. In it we observe the strange but admirable phenomenon of abundant, almost excessive, media coverage being accorded leaders and candidates of fringe and obscure parties. These are labels that might now apply to all except the LDP/NK. The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) that ruled for three years until last December has imploded and retains a support level of only some 5%, below that of the Japan Communist Party.

Following the July 21 vote, Abe will have a relatively free hand to push through even the more controversial parts of his agenda, adumbrated in the LDP election “manifesto” summarized in the previous two posts.

But what may be the most fateful issue for Japan has been carefully played down by Abe, and even by the opposition parties, during the election. This is how or whether Japan can or should endeavor to unfreeze relations with China and resolve the Senkaku/Diaoyu island dispute.

The serious and increasingly dangerous rupture with China gained a new dimension–and regained the headlines–on July 5 when Abe, appearing on a Fuji Television program, expressed “deep regret” that China was moving undersea gas field exploration equipment into an area of the East China Sea “in violation of a bilateral agreement.” “I must ask China to honor our agreement,” said Abe.

Abe’s criticism produced a brief flutter of comment in the Japanese media, but was quickly passed over. In Beijing, however, there was a multi-day thunderstorm.

In this instance, as in so many others affecting Japan’s foreign relations–including with the U.S.–we are again witnessing from Abe a maladroitness bordering on incompetence. What is going on here?

The specific issue is Chinese exploration in a section of the East China Sea close to but not over a notional mid-point line (illustrated in the graphic above) that can be drawn longitudinally (roughly north to south) through a large area of ocean and seabed that both China and Japan claim as falling within their respective 200 mile “exclusive economic zones” (EEZ). After Abe’s statement, Chinese official media published maps and diagrams documenting that activity was taking place on the Chinese side of the “mid-point line,” and that China was perfectly within its rights.

A July 4 Nihon Keizai Shimbun article reported that on June 27 the second raking official in Japan’s foreign ministry delivered a formal diplomatic protest of China’s action to the Chinese ambassador to Japan. On July 3, Japan’s cabinet secretary, Suga Yoshihide, stressed to the press that “we will not recognize any unilateral development activities in sea areas where the two countries have overlapping claims.”

Anyone with a knowledge of Chinese negotiating style could have guessed what was coming next.

In response to Suga, on the same day, July 3, China’s deputy foreign ministry spokesman, Ms. Hua Chunying, announced to the press that “we are are conducting exploration activities in sea area under our own administration.” Further, she continued, China has never agreed to and does not recognize any so-called “mid-point line” (my italics). Therefore, “China rejects Japan’s protest.”

Ms. Hua was stating facts in denying that China had ever formally accepted the concept of a “mid-point line.” Formal acceptance would mean recognizing Japan’s EEZ claims. This will never happen, just as China will never formally recognize or accept Japan’s claims to the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands.

Hence Abe was telling a highly provocative untruth when he mentioned an “agreement” with China over exploration in the East China Sea.

But of course there is something more. In June 2008, Japanese and Chinese government negotiators reach tentative agreement that a Chinese gas field development project in the East China Sea called “Shirakaba” by Japan and “Chunxiao” by China should proceed based on Chinese law, but with capital provided by Japanese corporations. Agreement in principle was also reached to establish a joint development zone in a northern area that extended across the notional “mid-point line.” In these discussions both sides set aside the issue of their respective “exclusive economic zones.”

As it happened, the above tentative agreements were scheduled to be formalized in signed agreements in September 2010. However, when Japan-China political relations soured over the collision of a Chinese fishing vessel with a Japanese Coast Guard vessel, China asked for an indefinite postponement of the joint exploration agreement signing. Since then, and particularly as the Senkaku/Diaoyu island dispute has escalated, China has reverted to strict interpretation of and insistence on its EEZ rights.

It is classic Chinese negotiating style to escalate rhetoric (sometimes combined with histrionic gestures) and to elaborately link otherwise seemingly unrelated issues, to bring maximum pressure on the counterparty to make concessions. Subtlety is practiced only in obfuscating sources, not in the message or desired effect. A vivid example of the style was an article penned by “scholars” in the People’s Daily a few weeks ago that called into question Japan’s sovereign claim over Okinawa.

What is going on in the East China Sea is really about the Senkaku/Diaoyu island dispute and China’s determination not to de-escalate pressure for concessions from the Abe government. Abe is also under pressure from the Obama administration to show initiative in trying to resolve the issue, so that the U.S. can continue improving relations with China.

It is obvious that Abe is showing strain, and even reaching for straws, as he stumbles in foreign policy. The pressure on Abe from both Washington nor Beijing will only increase after July 21.

Why does china break agreedmends that were made 2008?
Or does china want to provocate japan?
 
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From 1644 to the present,
Indeed there are several hundred years,
But we have 5,000 years of Chinese history,

Furthermore,
Taiwan has a lot of Japanese descent, right?

I dont even understand why you ansered him with that sentence...........
 
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Stupid 蝗蟲, what the heck means "Your ancestors participated in the Nanjing Massacre".
My ancestors followed Koxinga to Taiwan, we have nothing to do with any massacre.
Besides, many massacres were committed not only by the Qing army, but also by Ming army. Japan is outsider, but Ming Qing 魏蜀吳 are all China. Know the difference you idiot.

No doubt,

I'm not your compatriots,
From a historical perspective,
Your ancestors occupied my hometown ----- Wuchang,
Many people were massacred,
My ancestors expelled outside the city.
We are the enemy.

After the revolution, you joined the Japanese,
Although the Chinese Communist Party recognizes your nationality,
But people still do not like you,
Our home, the elderly tells the story of the revolution,
You always play a negative role.

Now, Wuchang rise of HANFU,
Obviously, you also served as the villain.

An Lushan, Shi Jingtang, Genghis Khan, Nurhachi,,,,,,
The lessons of history,
 
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