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Japan Seen Provoking China With Taiwan Security Ties Upgrade

Tokyo has sent a defence ministry official to assist a role in Taipei usually undertaken by a sole retired military officer to avoid riling China


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A Chinese warship is seen near Fuzhou and Taiwan's Matsu Islands. Photo: Reuters.

 

Japan has upgraded its security links to Taiwan in a move likely to antagonise China and ramp up tensions in the region even further.

Tokyo has appointed a serving government official to act as its de facto defence attache in Taiwan, sources said, elevating its ties to the strategic, democratic island.

Japan does not have any formal diplomatic representation in Taiwan, and instead handles bilateral relations through the Japan-Taiwan Exchange Association in Taipei, which is chiefly staffed by reassigned foreign and trade ministry officials. 

 

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The defence attache role, however, has until now been held by a retired Japan Self Defence Force officer to avoid antagonising China.

But he has now been joined by an official dispatched by the defence ministry to enhance information gathering and communicate with Taiwan’s military, said the sources, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

It is also “symbolic” of Japan’s support for Taiwan, said one of the people who know about the appointment. “Taiwan had been asking for an active duty defence official to fill the post,” he added.

Highlighting Tokyo’s nervousness about Beijing’s reaction, the move was halted last year after a Japanese media report about the plan, the sources said.

Japan’s defence ministry said that it would only pursue “non-governmental” ties to Taiwan, a Japanese colony from 1895-1945, that were within the bounds of a 1972 joint statement that recognised Beijing as the sole legitimate government of China.

Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs declined to comment when asked about the new defence attache but said it “will continue to deepen cooperation with similar-minded partners such as Japan”.

 

Beijing Aggression Unsettles Tokyo

China’s Taiwan Affairs spokesperson Chen Binhua said Beijing opposed “any form of official exchanges between countries with which China has established diplomatic relations and China’s Taiwan region”.

“China urges the Japanese side to draw lessons from history, abide by the one-China principle… and be prudent in its words and actions on the Taiwan issue,” Chen said at a weekly news conference on Wednesday in response to a question on the Reuters’ report.

Beijing’s expanding military presence around the island, which is only 100km (62 miles) from Japanese territory, has unsettled Tokyo. It worries about becoming embroiled in any conflict that could also threaten nearby sea lanes that supply Japan with most of its oil.

On Monday, Taiwan said a Chinese naval formation led by the aircraft carrier Shandong passed 60 nautical miles from its coast on its way to the western Pacific.

Concern about such manoeuvres is spurring calls for Japan to forge security links with Taiwan, including direct military-to-military contact that could help Japan plan for a contingency.

Yet Beijing could see any upgrade of ties as an attempt to interfere in its internal affairs.

In August last year, China responded to a visit to Taiwan by then US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi with military exercises that included missile strikes in waters close to Japanese islands.

 

Japan Military Build-Up

Four months later, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s administration unveiled Japan’s biggest military buildup since World War Two, with a doubling of defence spending over five years to pay for longer-range strike missiles, the development of an advanced fighter jet, and stockpiles of munitions and spare parts that it would need in a sustained conflict.

In an accompanying national security assessment, his government said peace in the Taiwan Strait was essential for international stability.

China has criticised Japan, the US and other Western nations for adopting what it calls a Cold War mentality.

So far, no senior Japanese government official has visited Taiwan, but several lawmakers have gone there in recent months in a broadening of unofficial travel meant to show support for the island.

That lawmaker diplomacy included a visit by Aso Taro, a former prime minister and vice-president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, last month when he met Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen.

At a forum there, Aso said Japan needed to show “resolve to fight” for Taiwan. Beijing said the remark was harmful to “the political foundation of China-Japan relations”.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

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Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.