China: U.S., Japan Disrupting Stable Asia-Pacific
BEIJING (Xinhua/Reuters) – China urges the United States and Japan to abandon the Cold War mentality and ideological bias, stop creating imaginary enemies and stop trying to sow the seeds of a new Cold War in the Asia-Pacific, and not to become disruptors of a stable Asia-Pacific, a foreign ministry spokesperson said.
Spokesperson Wang Wenbin made the remarks when asked for comments on a Joint Statement released by the United States and Japan, Xinhua news agency reported.
According to reports, in the joint statement, the U.S. and Japan called China “the greatest strategic challenge in the Indo-Pacific region and beyond” and criticized China on Taiwan, Hong Kong, Xinjiang and maritime issues.
Wang said the wording on China in this joint statement smacks heavily of a zero-sum Cold War mentality and contains groundless smears and attacks on China. “We are firmly against it,” he added.
He said the U.S. and Japan claim to advance regional peace and security, but what they do is finding pretexts for military build-up and willful use of force. They claim to champion a free and open Indo-Pacific region, but what they do is putting up various exclusionary blocs to create division and confrontation.
Wang said the U.S. and Japan claim to uphold the rules-based international order, but what they do is trampling on international law and the basic norms governing international relations and grossly interfering in other countries’ internal affairs.
What they have done poses a real challenge to regional peace, security and stability, he added.
Wang said the Asia-Pacific is an anchor for peace and development, not a wrestling ground for geopolitical competition.
He said that regional countries are for justice and against hegemonism. They hope to engage in cooperation, not confrontation. They aspire for true multilateralism and reject small circles that incite bloc confrontation.
The so-called two-plus-two meeting among the U.S. and Japanese officials saw them alleging that their countries faced serious security threats from the direction of China, and also agreeing to modernize and optimize their alliance.
Observers said the announcement marked the latest effort by Washington and Tokyo to increase cooperation for a possible conflict with China over the self-ruled island of Chinese Taipei.
China has sovereignty over Chinese Taipei, and under the ‘One China’ policy, almost all world countries recognize that sovereignty.
The Washington meeting also featured the countries’ officials pledging to reinforce, what they called, deterrence.
In a remarkable shift in its military mindset, Japan endorsed new security and defense strategy documents around two weeks earlier, putting it on a path to acquiring “counterstrike” capabilities, with the potential purchase of hundreds of U.S.-made Tomahawk cruise missiles.
The foreign and defense chiefs said they would deepen cooperation toward the “effective employment” of Japan’s long-range strike capabilities and promote joint research and development of state-of-the-art military equipment.