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China says worried by Japan arms exports ban revision

Krueger

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BEIJING Tue Feb 25, 2014

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Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaks during a lower house budget committee session at the parliament in Tokyo

(Reuters) - China expressed concern on Tuesday about Japan's drafting of new guidelines that would reverse a decades-old ban on weapons exports, saying it was a worrying part of Japan's swing to the right.

A source with knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Sunday that Japan had drafted the new guidelines. The changes would likely further strain Japan's ties with China and South Korea.

Japan has been reviewing the self-imposed export ban under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's new security strategy, aimed at bolstering the self-reliance of the military.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Japan had to address its neighbors' concerns about allowing he export of weapons.

"Against the backdrop of an intensifying swing to the right for Japanese politics, the intention behind and effect of massively loosening restrictions on the export of weapons really worries people," she told a daily news briefing.

"We hope that Japan can really learn the lessons of history, respect and face up to the legitimate and reasonable security concerns of its Asian neighbors and ... take real steps to promote regional peace and stability."

China's ties with Japan have long been poisoned by what China sees as Japan's failure to atone for its occupation of parts of China before and during World War Two.

China's state media said on Tuesday the government would this year likely approve the commemoration of two important dates - China's victory over Japan in the war and the other to mark the 1937 Nanjing Massacre.

China says Japanese troops killed 300,000 people in a massacre in the country's then-capital. A post-war Allied tribunal put the death toll at 142,000, but some conservative Japanese politicians and scholars deny a massacre took place.

It was not immediately clear how the days would be marked or if they would be designated public holidays.

China's anger over the past is never far from the surface of relations that have deteriorated sharply over the past 18 months because of a dispute over a chain of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea.

Ships from both countries shadow each other around the islets and Japan has scrambled jets numerous times in response to Chinese aircraft, raising fears of a clash.

Serving as prime minister for a rare second time and enjoying solid public approval, Abe says Japan needs a stronger military to cope with what he calls an increasingly threatening security environment, with a more militarily assertive China and unpredictable North Korea.

China says worried by Japan arms exports ban revision| Reuters
 
Maybe F-2? Some of their anti-ship missiles? I doubt their carrier.

The US2 sales is at an advanced stage of negotiation - (the price is steep as hell). I am not aware of anything else atm.
 
Well times have change and if the chinese imperials want to blame someone they have themselves to blame for arrogantly displaying their bullying tactics on everyone
 
Maybe F-2? Some of their anti-ship missiles? I doubt their carrier.

The problem is who is going to buy these. Japanese arms industry has been suffered price leveling just like all its other industries. Basically, for the same qaulity, the Japanese product is unreasonably expensive.Take F-2 for example, it is a dedicated anti-ship aircraft and it is technical spec is nothing to write home about among the four gen aircrafts (actually well below the average performance), but it cost 127 million USD just for domestic manufacturing. It is more than four times more expensive than a F15 or a Su-30 and both of these aircraft will blow F-2 out of water any time. Heck, even JF-17 would perform better as a general purpose aircraft and it is less than 1/6 of the cost of F-2.
 
The problem is who is going to buy these. Japanese arms industry has been suffered price leveling just like all its other industries. Basically, for the same qaulity, the Japanese product is unreasonably expensive.Take F-2 for example, it is a dedicated anti-ship aircraft and it is technical spec is nothing to write home about among the four gen aircrafts (actually well below the average performance), but it cost 127 million USD just for domestic manufacturing. It is more than four times more expensive than a F15 or a Su-30 and both of these aircraft will blow F-2 out of water any time. Heck, even JF-17 would perform better as a general purpose aircraft and it is less than 1/6 of the cost of F-2.

So why China must worry about ?
 
for military industry in working, ready for war, not benefits.
 
Same reason US worried about North Korea.

We agree Asia no nuclear weapon, but if 1 or 2 countries keep developing their nukes, others must follow to keep themselves safe.

Could you point me, which is the country in Asia with nukes ? could they abandon them unconditionally ?

So who must worry about who ?
 
We agree Asia no nuclear weapon, but if 1 or 2 countries keep developing their nukes, others must follow to keep themselves safe.

Could you point me, which is the country in Asia with nukes ? could they abandon them unconditionally ?

So who must worry about who ?

Well, I recommend that you take you suggestion to the members of the UN permanent security council and see how they respond to it.
 
Do they have anything to offer to us other than US2???? I'd love if they've any light tank in their inventory
 
I said it before... Japan is bound to go imperial again... finish were they left off. This time they should arm Uighur and Tibetians.
 
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