naturalfeature:senkaku

  • Heightened tensions over China’s air defence zone - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/11/26/pers-n26.html

    Heightened tensions over China’s air defence zone
    26 November 2013

    In a further sign of the dangers being fuelled by the Obama administration’s provocative pivot to Asia, China on Saturday declared an “air defence identification zone” (ADIZ) in the East China Sea. The new zone overlaps a similar Japanese ADIZ and includes one of the region’s flashpoints—the Senkaku islands (known as Diaoyu in China), which are claimed by both countries.

    The US and Japan said they would ignore China’s ADIZ, setting the stage for risky encounters between military aircraft that could lead to a clash, either through miscalculation or a refusal by US and Japanese warplanes to obey Chinese orders. US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel declared that the Chinese announcement “will not in any way change how the United States conducts military operations in the region.” He also reiterated the Obama administration’s official stance that the US would automatically support Japan in the event of a war with China over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands.

    #chine #japon #mer_de_chine #senkaku #conflit

  • Sino-Japanese tensions flare over disputed islands - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/09/16/chjp-s16.html?view=mobilearticle

    Sino-Japanese tensions flare over disputed islands
    By John Chan
    16 September 2013

    Tensions between Japan and China flared last Wednesday, on the anniversary of the Japanese government’s purchase last year of the disputed Senkaku islands (known as Diaoyu in China) from their private Japanese owner.

    Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was in Argentina to lobby for Tokyo’s bid for the 2020 Olympic Games, used the occasion to declare that Japan must maintain “effective control” over the Senkakus. Hours later, two Chinese H-6 bombers for the first time flew over international airspace between the Okinawa island chains and Miyako islands, near the Senkakus. Japan responded by scrambling fighter jets.

    #japon #chine #conflit #diférend_territorial

  • #Tokyo tend la main à la #Chine

    Le #Premier #ministre #japonais, Shinzo Abe, s’est dit prêt aujourd’hui à reprendre les discussions avec la Chine, après les tensions nées du différend sur l’archipel des #Senkaku #Diaoyu, en mer de Chine orientale.

    Premier vrai signe d’apaisement dans cet interminable conflit ?

    http://www.lefigaro.fr/flash-actu/2013/06/19/97001-20130619FILWWW00650-tokyo-tend-la-main-a-la-chine.php

    Revue de Presse Hebdomadaire sur la Chine du 17/06/2013

  • China’s dangerous brinkmanship in maritime Northeast Asia | The Strategist

    http://www.aspistrategist.org.au/chinas-dangerous-brinkmanship-in-maritime-northeast-asia

    China’s behaviour over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands dispute with Japan is deeply worrisome. It not only displays a level of brinkmanship which could easily lead to war, it also seems to be part of a broader maritime ‘probing’ strategy designed to constantly test the resolve of Japan and its US ally. The result could be even greater instability in Northeast Asia.

    At least twice in the past two weeks, Chinese forces directed a fire-control radar at a Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) vessel and helicopter. The key question is whether such dangerous crisis management reflects a deliberate strategy on the part of Beijing or if it was due to a lack of coordination among the key actors. According to media reports, the later seems closer to the truth. It seems that only now is China’s management of the dispute under direct command and coordination of a top-level task force led by General Secretary Xi Jinping.

    #chine #japon #senkaku

  • Island dispute continues to fuel China-Japan tensions - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/01/08/jpch-j08.html

    Island dispute continues to fuel China-Japan tensions
    By Peter Symonds
    8 January 2013

    Two incidents near the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea have underscored the danger of simmering tensions between China and Japan erupting into a major confrontation.

    The Japanese coastguard reported yesterday that four Chinese marine surveillance ships sailed within 12 nautical miles of the Japanese-controlled islands, known in Japan as Senkaku and in China as Diaoyu. The Japanese foreign ministry issued a formal protest to the Chinese embassy in Tokyo. The alleged intrusion was the first this year and the 21st since Tokyo “nationalised” the islands in September, provoking sharp protests from China.

    #chine #japon #senkaku

  • Air incident escalates Japan/China tensions over disputed islands

    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/dec2012/jpch-d15.shtml
    By Peter Symonds
    15 December 2012

    The entry of a Chinese maritime surveillance aircraft on Thursday into the airspace around the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu islands has further heightened tensions with Japan, which scrambled eight F-15 fighter jets and an early warning aircraft to intercept the plane. The small twin-engine aircraft, which went undetected by the Japanese military’s radar, left the area without a direct confrontation.

    The incident is a marked escalation of the island dispute both by China, which dispatched an aircraft to the area for the first time, and Japan, which responded with the heavy-handed use of force. Both sides have exploited the issue to stir up nationalism to divert attention from a worsening economic and social crisis at home.

  • Japan, China, and the Tide of Nationalism - Council on Foreign Relations

    Un texte éclairant

    http://www.cfr.org/asia/japan-china-tide-nationalism/p29080?cid=nlc-public-the_world_this_week-link13-20120921

    Author: Sheila A. Smith, Senior Fellow for Japan Studies

    Tensions between Japan and China over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands have escalated to a new, troubling level. On September 11, Japan’s cabinet secretary announced the government had purchased the islands from a Japanese citizen. Since then, China has sent nearly twenty marine surveillance ships to patrol through the islands, prompting a full alert by Japan’s Coast Guard. In addition, two Japanese activists landed on the Senkaku Islands on September 18.

    Anti-Japan demonstrations spread across China, reaching more than 100 cities, with Japanese businesses targeted for looting and damages. China’s Internet was alive with condemnation of Japan on September 18, the anniversary of the Japanese military’s invasion of China in 1931.

    #japon #chine #nationalisme

  • 5 Reasons Why the Senkaku (Diaoyu) Islands are NOT Chinese Territory - YouTube

    Superbe propagande, merveille de propagande japonaise justifiant que les iles Senkaku (Diaoyu pour les Chinois) sont bien japonaises. La musique choisie surtout est tout à fait époustouflante (qui peut me dire de qui c’est d’ailleurs ?)

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnlr_OBN2uw&list=PL2104ED7AB17696A3&index=0&feature=plcp

    Expanding China will be the biggest problem for the international society of the 21st century. Sinocentrism, an ancient imperialism deeply rooted in China’s history, seems now trying to swallow everything under the name of China. Sinocentrism has made Chinese people say, Taiwan is a part of China, Tibet is a part of China, East Turkestan is a part of China, Manchuria is a part of China, Mongolia is a part of China, Goguryeo is a part of China, the Spratly & Parcel islands are a part of China, the Senkaku islands are a part of China. It will also make them say, Okinawa is a part of China, North Korea is a part of China, South Korea is a part of China, Japan is a part of China, the whole Asia is a part of China, the whole Earth is a part of China. However, they must just realize that CHINA IS A MERE PART OF THE WORLD. Tibet must be Tibet. East Turkestan must be East Turkestan. Mongolia must be Mongolia. Manchuria must be Manchuria. Taiwan must be Taiwan. Each people must be allowed to decide their own future and what kind of tradition they will hand over to their children by their own. Sinocentrism is now blocking this basic human right. Democracy cannot coexist with Sinocentrism. The riverse is also true. Sinocentrism cannot coexist with Democracy. Either side must win and defeat the other. Which side will win? Sinocentrism or Democracy? Which side must win? Of course the latter.

    5 Reasons Why the Senkaku Islands are not Chinese Territory

    1. International Law

    “Island of Palmas Case” (1928), one of the most highly influential precedents dealing with island territorial conflicts say as follows,

    1) Firstly, title based on contiguity has no standing in international law.
    2) Secondly, title by discovery is only an inchoate title.
    3) Finally, if another sovereign begins to exercise continuous and actual sovereignty, (and the arbitrator required that the claim had to be open and public and with good title), and the discoverer does not contest this claim, the claim by the sovereign that exercises authority is greater than a title based on mere discovery.

    The Senkaku Islands were incorporated into Japan in 1895 by “prior occupation of terra nullius,” but both PRC (People’s Republic of China) and ROC (Republic of China) had never protested against Japan’s claim over the Senkaku Islands until 1971 for 76 years. Instead they had recognized the Islands as Japanese territory explicitly in their documents, newspapers, textbooks and maps. International law gives them the qualification to claim the Islands any longer.

    2. The Senkaku islands were discovered first not by Chinese but by Ryukyuans (Okinawan people).

    It was only 23 times that Chinese investiture Missions sailed to the Ryukyu Kingdom (Okinawa) in 507 years, while Ryukyuan Tributary Missions sailed to China over 580 times in the same period via the Senkaku Islands.

    3. There is no historical fact that China has exercised any “effective control” on the Senkaku Islands.

    China has claimed that the Senkaku islands had been Chinese territory “since the Ming Dynasty.” However, during the Ming Dynasty, even Taiwan was not a part of China. Taiwan was incorporated into Qing in 1683 for the first time. And all Chinese official documents written during the Qing Dynasty regarding Taiwan say the north end of Taiwan was the present Hoping island never Keelung. There is no historical fact that the Senkaku Islands were incorporated into China ever.

    4. The Japanese old map China quote often never admitted that the Senkaku islands were Chinese territory.

    China often quotes the Japanese old map, 「琉球三省並三十六島之図」(1786) by 林子平(Hayashi Shinei) to argue that the Senkaku Islands were colored in the same color as mainland China, so Japanese at that time recognized that the Senkaku islands were Chinese territory. However, in the same map, Taiwan was colored with the different color from the mainland China despite the fact that Taiwan was already incorporated in to Qing when the map was published in Japan. And Hayashi Shihei was not a Japanese governmental official, but a mere private citizen who was even arrested and punished by the Tokugawa Shogunate. We can not think Japan’s official view was reflected in his map anyway.

    5. There is no historical fact that Senkaku Islands had ever belonged to China, so China cannot say that they were stolen from China. So the Cairo Declaration has nothing to do with the Senkaku Islands.

    Conclusion.
    China has invaded and absorbed Tibet, East Turkestan, Inner Mongolia, and Manchuria. China is going to swallow the Senkaku Islands, Okinawa and Taiwan this time. The reestablishment of full-fledged Chinese Empire is their ultimate objective.

    #chine #japon #senkaku #diaoyu

  • Japan and China face off in island dispute
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/sep2012/chjp-s26.shtml

    By Peter Symonds
    26 September 2012

    A tense standoff is continuing between Japan and China over the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea. Japanese coast guard vessels are facing off against Chinese surveillance and fishery patrol ships, which have briefly entered waters near the rocky outcrops, claimed and controlled by Japan.

    The situation was further complicated yesterday when a flotilla of about 50 Taiwanese fishing vessels and 10 Taiwanese surveillance ships entered the disputed waters. Japanese coast guard ships turned water cannon on the fishing boats when loud hailers and electronic signs failed to deter them. Taiwan, like China, insists that the island group is historically part of Chinese territory.

    #chine #japon #diaoyu #senkaku

  • Iles Senkaku-Diaoyu, aux origines du conflit sino-japonais | Christian Kessler (Les blogs du Diplo)
    http://blog.mondediplo.net/2012-09-25-Iles-Senkaku-Diaoyu-aux-origines-du-conflit-sino

    La colère chinoise de ces derniers jours a été déclenchée par l’achat, le 11 septembre dernier, de trois des cinq îles de l’archipel des Senkaku par le gouvernement japonais pour la somme de 2,05 milliards de yens (21 millions d’euros). Elles appartenaient à l’homme d’affaires Kunioki Kurihara, résident de la préfecture de Saïtama. Outre ces trois îles – Uotsurijima, Kita-Kojima, Minami-Kojima –, le gouvernement s’intéresse à l’acquisition de la quatrième, Kubajima, propriété de Mme Kazuko Kurihara, la soeur du précédent. L’Etat ne possédait jusque-là que la cinquième île, Taishojima. Trois rochers, eux aussi inhabités, complètent encore l’ensemble. (...) Source : Les blogs du Diplo

  • Tensions between China and Japan flare over disputed islands

    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/sep2012/jpch-s13.shtml

    By Peter Symonds
    13 September 2012

    The Japanese government’s announcement on Tuesday that it had completed the purchase of three of the five Senkaku islands (known in China as Diaoyu) from their private owner threatens a new confrontation with Beijing, which also claims sovereignty over the islands.

    The Chinese foreign affairs ministry issued a statement opposing the decision, declaring that the purchase “cannot alter the fact [that] the Japanese side stole the islands from China.” Chinese defence ministry spokesman Geng Yangsheng registered “staunch opposition and strong protest,” warning that the Chinese military was unwavering in its determination “to defend national territorial sovereignty.”

    #chine #japon #frontières #conflit-frontaliers #revendications-maritimes #asie

  • Chine Japon Senkaku Mer de Chine orientale

    Mer de Chine orientale : une flottille japonaise débarque sur l’archipel de Senkaku - Monde - France Info

    http://www.franceinfo.fr/monde/mer-de-chine-orientale-une-flotille-japonaise-debarque-sur-l-archipel-de-

    le Dimanche 19 Août 2012

    Indiscutablement japonaises pour les uns, authentiquement chinoises pour les autres, les îles de Senkaku, au sort incertain, ravivent les tensions sino-japonaises. Le 15 août dernier, des militants pro-Pékin étaient venus y planter un drapeau chinois. En guise de réponse, une dizaine de militants nationalistes japonais y ont débarqué dimanche matin à l’aube. Tensions et réactions.

  • Frontières Murs Conflit Différend Japon Corée

    Des nationalistes japonais ont débarqué aux îles Senkaku, revendiquées par Pékin

    http://www.romandie.com/news/n/_Des_nationalistes_japonais_ont_debarque_aux_iles_Senkaku_revendiquees_par ?

    Des nationalistes japonais ont débarqué aux îles Senkaku, revendiquées par Pékin

    AU LARGE DES ILES SENKAKU (Japon) - Une dizaine de militants nationalistes japonais ont débarqué quelques heures sur une île de l’archipel des Senkaku contesté par Pékin, pour y planter le drapeau japonais, a constaté un journaliste de l’AFP.

    Dimanche à l’aube le président de l’association Gambare Nippon (En avant le Japon !), Satoru Mizushima, a sauté à l’eau et nagé avec une corde jusqu’au rivage rocailleux d’Uotsurijima, la principale île de ce petit archipel nommé Diaoyu par la Chine.

    Les suivants se sont accrochés à la corde pour le rejoindre.

    Les nationalistes qui avaient pris pied sur l’île n’ont finalement pas atteint le sommet escarpé et ont planté des drapeaux japonais à flanc de montagne et sur le rivage.

    C’est un territoire indiscutablement japonais. A flanc de montagne, on a trouvé des maisons de style japonais, avec les séchoirs à poisson, alors vous voyez ! , exulte Eiji Kosaka, un élu de la région de Tokyo. Il regrette toutefois que le gouvernement japonais n’ait pas d’activité ici, en tout cas ce voyage est une grande réussite.