Japan yesterday hit back at China’s denouncement of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s speech at a regional security forum, firing the latest salvo in an ongoing tit-for-tat row.
On Sunday, Chinese Lieutenant General Wang Guanzhong (王冠中), deputy chief of the general staff of China’s People’s Liberation Army, told the Shangri-La dialogue in Singapore that the comments made by Abe and US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel at the conference were “unacceptable.”
However, Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters in Tokyo: “We believe the Chinese senior official made claims based on mistake of facts and defamed our country.”
Suga said the Japanese delegation in Singapore immediately made a “strong protest” against the remarks to the Chinese side.
On Friday, Abe had opened the forum by urging countries to respect the rule of law — an apparent reference to what rivals consider aggressive Chinese behavior over disputed areas in the South China Sea and East China Sea.
Hagel on Saturday warned China against “destabilizing actions” in the South China Sea and listed a number of alleged infractions, including against the Philippines and Vietnam, the two most vocal critics of Beijing’s claims.
A furious Wang accused the two of c oordinating their remarks and encouraging each other to attack China.
In response to the US and Japanese remarks, Wang said in an address to the forum: “The Chinese delegation ... have this feeling that the speeches of Mr Abe and Mr Hagel are a provocative action against China.”
“The speeches made by Mr Abe and Mr Hagel gave me the impression that they coordinated with each other, they supported each other, they encouraged each other and they took the advantage of speaking first... and staged provocative actions and challenges against China,” he added.
Relations between Tokyo and Beijing have fallen to their lowest point for years, with much of the animus focused on disputed islands that Japan administers, but Taiwan and China claim.
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