China Bristles at Japanese Defense Minister Remarks
China criticized Japan's newly appointed defense minister
for the first time on Monday, saying it was “firmly opposed” to his comments
that Beijing has repeatedly engaged in “dangerous actions” in the East China
Sea.
Although both countries reached an agreement late last year
to reset ties, the comments by China's defense ministry underscore the fragile
state of relations between China and Japan.
Relations, which have long been poisoned by what China sees
as Japan's failure to atone for its occupation of parts of China before and
during World War II, have deteriorated sharply over the past 18 months because
of a dispute over a chain of uninhabited islets in the East China Sea.
Gen Nakatani, a lawmaker who served in Japan's armed forces
for several years, was appointed by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in late
December. Nakatani has held the defense minister's post before and believes
Japan should have the ability to hit enemy bases pre-emptively in the face of
imminent attack.
Nakatani accused China last week of violating Japan's
territorial waters with its vessels in the East China Sea, adding that China
had locked fire-control radar on Japan's vessels, set up an air defense
identification zone in the East China Sea, and “flown its fighter jets
abnormally close” to Japanese aircraft.
In a statement on its website, China's Defense Ministry hit
back, saying its military activities in the sea and airspace were “completely
legitimate.”
“The leader of Japan's defense department ignores the facts
and keeps on rehashing the same tune, playing up the ‘China military threat,’”
the ministry said. “China is firmly opposed to this.”
The ministry reiterated its stance that China had a right to
set up air defense identification zone and that it had already clarified to
Tokyo on the use of radar.
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