Newsletter No.
1438
News-Analysis
August 18, 2009
CHINA REJECTS MSDF
PORT CALL
Two different stories that
we have been following have just intersected in an unexpected
manner. On the one hand, we have reported about the MSDF training
squadron’s visits to Muslim countries in Shingetsu Newsletter
Nos. 1377 and
1434. On the other hand,
we have reported about the political fallout from the recent
violence in Xinjiang in Shingetsu Newsletter Nos. 1406,
1420, and 1427.
Now these two stories have become one.
The Asahi Shinbun
reports today that China has rejected a port call at Hong
Kong by the MSDF training squadron, apparently in protest
over the recent visit to Japan of Rebiya Kadeer as well as
Japanese criticism of Chinese minority policies.
The three MSDF ships had hoped
to call at Hong Kong at the end of this month, but the Japanese
Embassy in Beijing was informed on August 12th that it would
be “difficult” to accept the squadron due to “sensitive
issues.” The China Daily report below confirms
that Xinjiang is indeed the sensitive issue that Beijing has
in mind.
Although a rapprochement between
Tokyo and Beijing is highly desirable for a number of important
reasons, I personally believe that Japanese leaders ought
to continue to shrug indifferently at the nationalist temper
tantrum that is ongoing in China at the moment.
There is one (non-Chinese)
Shingetsu Member who has been trying to convince me privately
that China’s problems in Xinjiang are related to covert
US activities in the region designed to stir up problems for
a rising China, but I remain skeptical about this interpretation
of events. I’ve read a few books about Xinjiang in the
past two years that make me lean toward the view that Beijing’s
problems there are overwhelmingly homegrown.
If my interpretation is the
correct one—and that China has created its own mess
in Xinjiang—then why should the Japanese or anyone else
treat Beijing’s shrill protests on this matter with
undue gravity?
Warships' Visit Floats Up Agenda
China Daily
August 18, 2009
China has good reason to refuse
a proposed visit to Hong Kong of three Japanese warships,
Chinese media and experts are saying. They said the ships
should not be made welcome following recent decisions in Tokyo
to host Xinjiang separatist Rebiya Kadeer and allow planned
visits from former Taiwan leader Lee Teng-hui and the Dalai
Lama.
The website of Japan's Asahi
Shinbun newspaper reported Sunday that the three Japan
Maritime Self Defense Force (JMSDF) vessels, with more than
700 naval officers and crew on board, set off from Tokyo in
April. The ships called in at 13 countries in Southeast Asia,
the Middle East and Europe and are due back home in early
September.
Though the mini fleet had
no plans initially to visit Hong Kong, Japan has since raised
the idea of a stopover sometime late this month or in early
September in an attempt to improve exchanges with the Chinese
navy, said the website. According to the report, the Chinese
government told the Japanese embassy in Beijing that "it
is a sensitive issue, so far there is no atmosphere for approving
Japanese warships' stopover in Hong Kong." The report
quoted Japanese analysts as saying that China was expressing
its discontent following Japan's reception of Kadeer, Lee
Teng-hui and the Dalai Lama.
Kadeer is head of the World
Uighur Congress, which is suspected of having instigated the
July riots in Xinjiang that claimed at least 197 lives. Lee
and the Dalai Lama are scheduled to visit Japan and make speeches
there in September and November.
A diplomat with the Japanese
embassy, who declined to be named, told China Daily
yesterday that Japan was still negotiating with China about
the suggested visit. An official with the Foreign Ministry's
spokesman's office said the ministry was studying the case,
while the Ministry of National Defense made no comment yesterday.
Hong Kong-based Shing
Pao Daily News said in an editorial yesterday that "Beijing
is assured and bold with justice" in declining the visit.
"The request for JMSDF ships to visit Hong Kong would
ordinarily be normal practice among military exchanges with
China but what the Japanese government did recently contradicts
with the principal of friendly cooperation and made the atmosphere
unsuitable," it said.
Su Hao, director of China
Foreign Affairs University's Center for Asia-Pacific Studies,
said the request from the Japanese warships to visit Hong
Kong was significant because it was unprecedented, even though
there is an agreement between Beijing and Washington to allow
US warships to stop in Hong Kong for supplies.
The first Japanese warship
to visit China after World War moored at a naval base in Zhanjiang,
Guangdong province, last summer, drawing national attention
because of Japan's past invasion of China.
"It's understandable
for the government to decline such a request at a time when
many sensitive issues have emerged in bilateral relations,"
Su said.