Koizumi defends statement on Taiwan (Agencies) Updated: 2005-02-21 16:02
 Japan is not
seeking new friction with China after Beijing protested a joint Japan-US
declaration expanding the scope of their alliance by declaring concern
over Taiwan, Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi says.
[AFP/file] | TOKYO - Japan is not seeking new
friction with China after Beijing protested a joint Japan-US declaration
expanding the scope of their alliance by declaring concern over Taiwan, Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi says.
Japan and the United States at weekend talks shared anxiety over tensions in
the Taiwan Strait for the first time in their half-century alliance, which was
built on US security guarantees for Japan after World War II.
But Koizumi said Japan was not stepping up pressure on China, saying the
statement in Washington reflected Japan's position that there needed to be a
"peaceful solution" in the Taiwan Strait.
"Our stance is consistent with the past," Koizumi told reporters.
China expressed "serious concern" about the statement on Taiwan.
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiroyuki Hosoda appeared to say the United
States was the main force putting Taiwan into the joint statement.
"The US concern is strong," Hosoda said. "For our country there is no new
element in particular as we are hoping for peace (in the Taiwan Stait)."
China-Japan relations have worsened in recent months over a range of issues
such as energy development in the East China Sea and Koizumi's repeated visits
to the Yasukuni shrine, which honors Japanese war dead including war criminals.
The joint statement in Washington said Japan and the United States would
"encourage the peaceful resolution of issues concerning the Taiwan Strait
through dialogue."
It also called for "a cooperative relationship with China, welcoming the
country to play a responsible and constructive role regionally as well as
globally."
The statement was reached during talks between the US and Japanese foreign
affairs and defense chiefs and is due to be signed later this year.
Kazuro Umezu, international relations professor at Nagoya Gakuin University,
said tensions could mount between Japan and China before the statement was
signed.
"China will probably pressure Japan (not to sign the joint document) in
various ways," he said.
Japan has been pushing for a larger world role, in particular a permanent
seat on the United Nations Security Council.
It has sent troops to Iraq and Indonesia on humanitarian missions
despite its 1947 constitution which bars the keeping of a military.
But China has made clear it opposes a permanent seat for Japan, saying Tokyo
needed to take further responsiblity for its wartime militarism.
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