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Politics & Law

Japan says it is acting calmly in island dispute with China


Shinzo Abe and Barack Obama

Shinzo Abe and Barack Obama

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday said he told President Barack Obama in a meeting that Japan would act calmly in its row with China over tiny islands in the East China Sea claimed by both Asian countries.

“I explained that we have always been dealing with this issue … in a calm manner,” he said through a translator, while sitting next to Obama in the White House Oval Office.

“We will continue to do so and we have always done so,” he said.

Tension has raised fears of an unintended military incident near the islands, known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China. Washington says the islets fall under a U.S.-Japan security pact, but it is eager to avoid a clash in the region.

Abe said the existence of the Japan-U.S. alliance was a stabilizing factor in the area.

“We agreed that we would stay in close coordination with each other in dealing with such issues and other issues,” he said.

Obama, in his remarks to reporters, said Japan was one of the United States’ closest allies. He said the two men would discuss trade and other economic issues and agreed that their top priority was economic growth.

Obama declined to answer a reporter’s question on whether they would discuss the Japanese yen.

Expectations for Abe’s economic programs, especially monetary easing, have cut some 10 percent off the yen’s value against the U.S. dollar since Abe took office, raising concern that Japan is weakening its currency to export its way out of recession.

Obama and Abe also discussed North Korea and agreed to cooperate at the United Nations over the issue. Abe said the two men also talked about additional sanctions against North Korea, which tested a nuclear bomb last week in defiance of U.N. resolutions.

Source: Reuters – “Abe: Japan acting calmly in island dispute with China”
 
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About chankaiyee2

Author of the book "Tiananmen's Tremendous Achievements" about how talented scholars with moral integrity seized power in the Party and state and brought prosperity to China. The second edition of the book will soon be published, in which the first edition will be the first part entitled "Tiananmen Protests and Jiang Zemin's Coup" with some minor improvement in style and correction of printing errors. The new part, i.e. the second part entitled "Xi Jinping Cyclone", gives an insightful description of the events in China after the publication of the first edition: the mystery of the Bo Xilai's downfall, the mystery of Xi Jinping's nearly two-week absence, the three black boxes, etc. The book does Justice to Tiananmen Protests by revealing Tiananmen's great achievments in facilating Jiang Zemin's coup to substitute intellectuals' dominance of the party and state for workers' and peasants'. It refutes Tiananmen Butcher's Justification of the Massacre.

Discussion

One Response to “Japan says it is acting calmly in island dispute with China”

  1. Reblogged this on Oyia Brown.

    Posted by OyiaBrown | February 24, 2013, 7:26 pm

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