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LeveragedBuyout

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I prefer thematic threads to contain all of the news items along a defined axis instead of a separate thread for each news item, so let's explore new developments in China-Japan relations here.

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China and Japan’s ‘Double Cold’ Trap | The Diplomat

China and Japan's 'Double Cold' Trap
Crisis control should be the top priority in Sino-Japanese relations.

November 01, 2014

There is no doubt the current Sino-Japanese relationship is in deep trouble. Since Japan decided to nationalize Diaoyu/Senkaku islands in 2012, China and Japan have been in a very cold political relationship, which has also negatively affected their economic relationship. Before 2012, many analysts used the term “hot economics, cold politics” to describe Sino-Japanese relations; but after 2012 it gradually became “cold economics, cold politics,” though the bilateral economic relationship is still solid overall.

How can the two countries get out of this “double cold” trap? Many have put their hope on the upcoming possible Xi-Abe meeting at APEC next month. Although it is true that a Xi-Abe meeting, if realized, would bring some concrete benefits to Sino-Japanese relations, we should not expect too much from such a meeting for a set of reasons.

A big achievement of the Xi-Abe meeting, if realized, might be on the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands dispute. After all, it is this dispute back in 2012 that dragged Sino-Japanese relations into a big hole; thus it is only reasonable that both sides want to restore their relationship by reaching some kind of understanding on the Diaoyu/Senkaku dispute. According to some reports, Japan might make some concessions by acknowledging that there is in fact a dispute over the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands, though Japan would insist that the islands are still Japanese territory. Of course, one needs to be careful here not to expect too much from Japan; still, China would be able to declare some kind of victory if Japan in one way or another admits that there is a dispute. This would be a positive step towards an eventual peaceful resolution of the dispute in the future.

However, one should not be overly optimistic even if Japan admits that there is a dispute over the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands. As Peking University Japanese expert Yu Tiejun powerfully argued earlier this year, crisis control should be the top priority in Sino-Japanese relations. Yu pointed out that China should not let Sino-Japanese relations get out of control, and should especially avoid the spiral model of crisis escalation, which could have very uncertain consequences. A dangerous incident could still happen between Chinese and Japanese vessels, or between Chinese planes and Japanese fighter jets.

Moreover, structural factors seem to pose major obstacles to improving Sino-Japanese relations. China has hoped that Japan would take serious and genuine actions to show its new attitude toward history, which has plagued Sino-Japanese relations for decades. China’s attitude is very clear: if Abe simply wants to use a Xi-Abe meeting at APEC to improve Abe’s domestic position and image, then China would not play along. In a sense, from China’s perspective Abe has not earned their trust. In their eyes, Abe is just playing a game to win international public opinion by painting China as the one who refuses to cooperate.

Domestically, Abe is now having a difficult time as Abenomics has failed to deliver the kind of results that many had hoped for. Economic data show that inflation is low and not enough jobs have been created. China’s rise can help revive Japan’s economy, but its dispute with China and its attitude toward history prevent Japan from moving closer to China’s huge market. Politically, Abe is also in trouble as two of his ministers resigned over scandals. What all this means for Abe is that he is now distracted domestically and thus wont be able to make bold and important foreign policy decisions with regard to China.

This should not be surprising, though. Nobody expects Sino-Japanese relations to go back to normal in the near future. To some degree, it does not matter much whether or not there is an Xi-Abe meeting. A great deal remains to be done in areas such as history education, nationalism, economic competition, and so on for both countries. Under the current circumstances, none of the above issues will be resolved quickly. This, again, is the reason why crisis control should be the top priority for both countries. As long as a crisis does not escalate into a real military conflict, there is always room for peaceful negotiation. Being patient will be a big virtue in handling Sino-Japanese relations these days.
 
Excellent thread, Sir. Will be reading into developments here. :)
 
Japan was a sad story.
Maybe you can join with us if you fight with the 5 boss in the world like what we did in the past;)
 
In a recent CNTV interview, Professor Liu Jiangyong, vice director of the Institute of Modern International Relations of Tsinghua University, commented that Japan is currently isolated in Northeast Asia and marginalized in Southeast Asia. The Abe administration is losing chances to improve ties with Russia over the sanctions and island disputes. The future of Japan-U.S relations is also tenuous due to Abe's government failing to satisfy U.S. demands.

Because of Japan’s hard-line stance, there will not likely be any breakthroughs in diplomacy with China and South Korea. Abe had initially held high expectations for closer ties with India, having tried to set up a deal with Prime Minister Narendra Modi to establish a security system aimed to contain China. However, as records show, Modi prefers balanced relations to maximize India’s benefits. For this reason, Japan’s attempt to drive a wedge between China and India will have limited impact, as China and India are seeking deeper economic cooperation and bilateral relations.

To realize his ambition of containing China,Abe had initially planned to invite Russian President Vladimir Putin to visit Japan this autumn to mend ties hurt by past territorial disputes. However, Japan created a diplomatic quandary for itself by implementing sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine issue following suit with the European Union and the United States.

Japan had hoped to draw on Russia’s support to become a permanent a member of the UN. Abe had also planned to cooperate with Russia in the construction of an underwater gas pipeline. Unfortunately for Japan, the country’s punitive sanctions applied to Russia over the Ukraine crisis have seriously damaged these prospects.

Even in its relations with the United States, Japan is now faced a dilemma. The Abe administration recently lifted the ban on the right to collective self-defense by reinterpreting the constitution this July. The constitutional reinterpretation allows Japanese forces to enter into combat zones with allies. One of Japan’s intentions here is to gain US support to contend with China over the Diaoyu Islands through assisting the US Army in international confrontations.

However, the unexpected rise of the 'Islamic State' might present Japan with a tough decision if the US requires Japan to join in combat against IS. In this event, Japan provide military assistance? The recent attack on Canada’s parliament which took place in the nation’s capital, shows the potential consequences for entering into the conflict with the Islamic State. The Japanese people and the opposition party are not likely to allow Japan to be dragged into such a dangerous situation. On the other hand, if Japan chooses not to participate, relations with the US will likely suffer.

@LeveragedBuyout
This is exactly what i mean with Japan's shortsighted foreign policy, though i doubt she has one to begin with lol. Japan cannot afford to abandon US for she relies heavily on it. Naturally there's no other option than to echo the same sentiments towards Russia with sanctions. You already know about Japan's claim of Dokdo, Kurils and Diaoyu as her own sovereignty and the not too rosy relations both Koreas and China have with Japan (not to mention Japanese historical textbook version). This is why Japan cannot improve ties with her neighbors. Germany on the other hand didn't have sovereignty issues with her neighbors so that makes it less complicating. When Japan decided to spit on China's face two years ago, things are not gonna go back like they were before, so relocating the class A criminal names to another shrine isn't enough to break the ice.
 
Xi's handshake with former President of Japan,Fukuda recently is seen as a sign of thawing ties between the 2 countries. Also the fact that there are a large number of Chinese tourists visiting Japan shows that being sanguine about China-Japan relations is not expecting too much.
Xi-Abe's summit, if happens would be a good news to the region.
Now that Japan has eased its claims on senkaku islands the ball is in China's court.
But the jet scarmbles by both nations should stop.
And if my personal opinion matters then I would say China is not wrong in expecting an apology from Japan for the atrocities of WWII.
The island issue can be solved amicably.
 
@LeveragedBuyout
This is exactly what i mean with Japan's shortsighted foreign policy, though i doubt she has one to begin with lol. Japan cannot afford to abandon US for she relies heavily on it. Naturally there's no other option than to echo the same sentiments towards Russia with sanctions. You already know about Japan's claim of Dokdo, Kurils and Diaoyu as her own sovereignty and the not too rosy relations both Koreas and China have with Japan (not to mention Japanese historical textbook version). This is why Japan cannot improve ties with her neighbors. Germany on the other hand didn't have sovereignty issues with her neighbors so that makes it less complicating. When Japan decided to spit on China's face two years ago, things are not gonna go back like they were before, so relocating the class A criminal names to another shrine isn't enough to break the ice.

Well said, Japan is certainly in a difficult diplomatic position. That said, it's not entirely of Japan's making--China didn't become explicitly hostile to Japan until fairly recently (last 15 years or so), so Japan probably trusted that its peace treaty with China was genuine. Obviously the Senkakus/Diaoyu issue inflamed relations, but they cannot be said to have been warm before that.

As far as Russia, I think it's a bit naive to think that Russia would have ever surrendered any territory in the Kurils to Japan. Russia only expands, it does not contract voluntarily. Russia's economic interests also determine that if given the opportunity, it will sell to Japan, no matter what the politics dictate. China cannot consume all of Russia's output, and with Europe trying to reduce its dependence, Russia doesn't have a lot of options. Russia is not a major concern for Japan.

South Korea will probably never forgive Japan, no matter what Japan does. I see China improving relations with Japan long before South Korea ever does, even though South Korea needs Japan more than Japan needs South Korea. If South Korea waits too long, China will hollow out its industries, and its negotiating leverage with both Japan and China will disappear.

India will never join an alliance, either with the US or China. It sees itself as a superpower in its own right (or at least someday), and would not tolerate being part of another country's coalition. The best Japan or China can hope for from India is a strong trade relationship.

So where does that leave us? Exactly where we started, the Great Game for Southeast Asia. Here, Japan is doing much better than China, given China's aggressive moves in the SCS, to which Japan has no claim. The major lever that China has is economic, of course, and so it will be interesting to see how this plays out. It's too soon to count Japan out here, so if China is waiting for Japan to come begging on its knees, it will probably be waiting for a long time.

I won't deny that the US is benefiting from this situation tremendously. Countries that are alienated by either side can be picked off by the US, and we continue to solidify our presence in Asia: Japan, South Korea, increasingly with the Philippines, and now Vietnam. Perhaps even Myanmar. Of course, since Japan and the US are security allies, that in turn strengthens Japan.

No one said geopolitics was easy!
 
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For America,Japan is not only a vanguard in Asia but also a sheep . America cut the wool from Japan.
Fromthis point of view,Japan even is not country.How poor Japan is.
In the past Chinese finance is too young too simple,but now for Beating the evil Japanese capitalism.I think we should join this game.However ,the greatest difference between some XXX street and XXX party is if it is patriotic.We are rabbit but we can also drink other blood--You know ,people in western part of our country still eat grass.I'm so sad.........
 
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LeveragedBuyout said:
India will never join an alliance, either with the US or China. It sees itself as a superpower in its own right (or at least someday), and would not tolerate being part of another country's coalition
Lol you made us Indians sound so arrogant and nefelibata.
Truth is India never had warm relations with China ergo both the countries are always suspicious of other's motives.
While the issue with US is that it likes to 've an upper hand in every issue. We can not allow that.
 
Lol you made us Indians sound so arrogant and nefelibata.
Truth is India never had warm relations with China ergo both the countries are always suspicious of other's motives.
While the issue with US is that it likes to 've an upper hand in every issue. We can not allow that.

I just don't see any indication that India would be willing to join an alliance, whether it's India's history with the Non-Aligned Movement, or Modi's maneuvering between China and the US today. There is extreme bitterness towards the US displayed by many Indian users here over the American treatment of India in the wake of India's nuclear tests, and I suspect a poll would indicate that Indians believe India should remain neutral (although I'm sure you know better than I do). India has one of the most tepid views of the US in Asia (How Asians View Each Other | Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Project ), only slightly better than China. Also note in the poll how few Indians view the US as India's greatest ally, which doesn't provide fertile ground for creating a formal alliance.
 
I just don't see any indication that India would be willing to join an alliance, whether it's India's history with the Non-Aligned Movement, or Modi's maneuvering between China and the US today. There is extreme bitterness towards the US displayed by many Indian users here over the American treatment of India in the wake of India's nuclear tests, and I suspect a poll would indicate that Indians believe India should remain neutral (although I'm sure you know better than I do). India has one of the most tepid views of the US in Asia (How Asians View Each Other | Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Project ), only slightly better than China. Also note in the poll how few Indians view the US as India's greatest ally, which doesn't provide fertile ground for creating a formal alliance.
I must say that survey shows fairly accurate values. Out of curiosity I've created a thread on same as you suggested. :)
 
China and Japan's Real Problem: Enter the Fairness Dilemma | The National Interest

China and Japan's Real Problem: Enter the Fairness Dilemma
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"In a crisis, the fairness dilemma provides a constantly ready store of dry tinder, limits the political space within which Japan and China can act, and thus provides a distinct path of escalation."

Nicholas D. WrightJames L. Schoff
November 2, 2014

Relations between Japan and China have deteriorated steadily since 2012, when the disagreement over who owns some small islands in the East China Sea moved to the front of their bilateral agenda. China made nearly 200incursions into territorial waters around the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu islands in 2013, “compared to two in 2011 and none in 2010.” Japanese fighter jets scrambled a record of over 300 times in the area last year. This is dangerously dry tinder for escalation between a key U.S. ally and a nuclear-armed, rising China. U.S. diplomats have struggled to balance their neutrality in the dispute over the islands’ ownership, with a strategy to protect U.S. interests that combines reassuring Japan and deterring China. But Washington’s analysis of the issue misses a core challenge in Japanese-Chinese relations that increases the risk of conflict: a fairness dilemma.

Many U.S. policy makers view the rising Japanese-Chinese tensions through the lens of a security dilemma between the two countries, where each side’s fear of the other side’s capabilities and uncertain intentions leads to countermeasures that feed a vicious cycle. Policies to address a security dilemma include reassuring allies, while reducing uncertainty through transparency and clear deterrence. Reducing this fear is necessary, but insufficient in this case.

A realistic view of human decision making describes another fundamental driver of potential tragedy in East Asia: fairness. Some think fairness and justice “ought” to matter for moral or religious reasons. But modern biology tells us that rejecting unfairness is a deep-rooted biological drive, for which humans are prepared to pay large costs—fairness “is,” not just “ought” to be, a practical policy challenge.

For U.S. policy makers, fairness matters because it is a powerful motivation for both China and Japan. Yet these countries’ perceptions of fairness are often incompatible, leading to a fairness dilemma that could end in tragedy and involve the U.S. military. Between China and Japan now, the standard playbook of reassurance and resolve are necessary, but not enough. A “one step back, three steps forward” strategy taking into account the fairness dilemma, however, is a better long-term approach.

Fairness: From “Ought” to “Is”

Humans are prepared to reject unfairness at substantial cost, and this is rooted in our biology. In a well-known example called the ultimatum game, one person gets an amount of money (e.g. $10) and proposes a split with a second person (e.g. $9 for himself, $1 for the other). That other person then decides to either accept the offer (in which case both get the proposed split) or reject the offer (in which case both get zero). Even when receiving an offer of free money compared to getting nothing, humans reject offers under 25 percent of the money around half the time. Brain scanning of social interactions shows that neural activity encodes the exact degree of unfairness, including in the game described above. Further, scientists are developing detailed knowledge of how this occurs even within brain regions.

Not only humans, but also nonhuman primates reject unfairness. Capuchinmonkeys performing a simple job will reject a payment of cucumber (which they like) when for the same job a fellow monkey gets tasty red grapes. Put simply, the negative value of unfairness overshadows the positive value of the money (or cucumber)—unfairness is rejected, despite its cost.

Pioneering realist Hans Morgenthau understood that a realistic view of human decision making matters. At the start of Politics Among Nations he wrote, "This theoretical concern with human nature as it actually is, and with the historical processes as they actually take place, has earned for the theory presented here the name of realism.” Morgenthau’s first principle of political realism emphasized that politics is governed by objective laws with their roots in human nature. As modern science clarifies the neurobiology underlying human nature, diplomats and defense planners should understand that the perception of fairness “is” crucial in foreign-policy success, not just a factor that “ought” to be important.

The Fairness Dilemma and Hegelian Tragedy between China and Japan

Danger between Japan and China arises not just from their military investments or rules of engagement, but also from their mutually incompatible subjective perceptions of the fairness of each other’s positions. This fairness dilemma can lead to the type of tragedy identified by the philosopher Georg Hegel, where tragedy does not arise from the clash of right and wrong, but instead because each side firmly believes itself right. Moreover, justice demands punishment or rejection of the other’s action that is perceived as unfair. Two sources fuel the current fairness dilemma between China and Japan: their historically based narratives; and their contemporary views of what constitutes fairness in the international system.

Consider a Japanese narrative. Imperialism was rampant before and during World War II. Japan behaved little differently to other colonial powers, but had the misfortune to begin late and lose the war. They were severely punished by the firebombing of Tokyo and nuclear attacks killing an estimated 280,000; destruction of up to one-third of the nation’s wealth; imposition of a war-renouncing constitution; de-deification of the Emperor; redistribution of lands; and Allied war-crimes trials that resulted in about 920 executions of Japanese with some 3,000 more by the Soviets. Japanese leaders apologized for the War, including Prime Minister Nakasone in 1985 and Emperor Akihito in 1990. Prime Minister Murayama’s 1995 statement on the war apologized for Japan’s “aggression and colonial rule,” and in 1993, Chief Cabinet Secretary Kono apologized officially for the Japanese government’s role in coercively recruiting wartime prostitutes (“comfort women”) and their “immeasurable pain and incurable physical and psychological wounds.” Japan paid reparations (in different forms) in agreements related to the occupied countries (in 1951), South Korea (1965) and China (1972); agreements that settled war-related legal claims between the governments and their people. From the perspective of most Japanese, the country reflects on history as well as most others, and any concern that Japan might revert to its militarist past simply ignores its sixty-two-year political, legal and societal reality.

Then consider a Chinese narrative. China ridicules the idea that Japan was “just another imperial power” in the nineteenth century and sees it as a pitiless aggressor. Moreover, Japan frequently sought to downplay and obfuscate its wartime aggression, which caused millions of Chinese civilian deaths, through opinion leader commentary and its education system. Emblematic is the 1937-38 “Nanjing Massacre” in which the Chinese claim about 300,000 were murdered, but that some influential Japanese politicians and commentators deny happened. Even before this, nineteenth-century Japan joined the pack of Western powers to force “Unequal Treaties” on China that unfairly exploited her weakness, leading to the “Century of Humiliation” and territorial losses, including Taiwan. The United States’ postwar occupation of Japan, despite initial toughness, later released many war criminals who resumed power. In addition, Japan’s alliance with the United States and Europe conspired to write rules of international law and finance to their advantage. Now that China has recovered its strength (at great cost), they demand that Beijing conform completely to these so-called international norms. There is a powerful sense of entitlement to recover and receive restitution for past losses, and establish new legal and diplomatic relationships more reflective of the current regional-power dynamics.

Compounding these incompatible, historically based narratives are different contemporary views of what constitutes fairness in the international system. To Japan, the rule of law is of primary importance. For instance, Japan may not agree with the 2014 ruling against the country’s whaling practices by the International Court of Justice, but plans to abide by the letter of the ruling, consistent with its narrative. Indeed, even at times of relative strength in the 1930s or the 1980s, Japan regularly justified its foreign and trade policies by citing international law.

In contrast, China often views fairness and justice in a historical context and in terms of the nation’s sovereign rights, which can together outweigh the letter of the law. This helps justify China’s repeated incursions into the territorial waters of the Japanese-administered Senkaku/Diaoyu islands. Beijing believes it has historical claim. And Beijing believes that because Japan is using its administrative control over the islands to establish de facto sovereignownership; therefore, given China’s rights, it is fair for China to act more assertively than the letter of law may permit. It is not necessarily that China believes “might makes right,” but that China’s increased strength now allows it to accomplish what it believed to be “right” all along. A key Japanese concern is whether China’s perception of “what’s right” will be elastic in connection with its growing power.

These narratives and conceptions of fairness are compelling when seen from within each country—but they are incompatible.

Dangers from the Fairness Dilemma

The fairness dilemma and the security dilemma have roots in different, powerful human drives. A security dilemma arises from fear or uncertainty of the other’s motivations and capabilities, where precautionary or defensively motivated measures are misperceived as offensive threats that can lead to countermeasures in kind. Thus, “if outsiders wish to understand and perhaps reduce the odds of conflict” as scholar Barry Posen concludes an analysis of the security dilemma, they must ask “Which groups fear for their physical security and why?”

In contrast, in the fairness dilemma, each side is driven to take actions they see as self-evidently right and just, even at potentially high cost to themselves—but which the other side considers unfair, aggressive or risk taking. One does not necessarily have to be afraid or uncertain of the other’s motivations and capabilities; the rejection of unfairness or pursuit of justice can drive one to act.

Dangers arise from the fairness dilemma in the medium term. It erodes other hitherto healthy aspects of Japanese-Chinese relations, such as in trade and investment. Japanese direct investment in China, for example, almost halvedin 2014 compared to the year before. Lack of mutual comprehension from the fairness dilemma muddies interpretations of the other’s actions, so breeding mistrust. It magnifies the potential impact of random accidents or incidents, for instance, with fishing boats or tourists.

Further, the fairness dilemma contributes to seemingly contradictory balance-of-power perceptions. Tokyo has Washington’s pledged support if Japanese ships are attacked or the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands are seized, but Japan has primary responsibility for this kind of crisis and Washington remains officially neutral on sovereignty. Over the fairness dilemma, Japan feels more alone and vulnerable. However, in the security dilemma, the United States is central, so China feels more vulnerable. So each side has an aspect of the relationship where it feels itself an insecure underdog seeking an advantage.

In a crisis, the fairness dilemma provides a constantly ready store of dry tinder, limits the political space within which Japan and China can act and thus provides a distinct path of escalation.

What to Do: “1 Step Back, 3 Steps Forward” to Overcome the Fairness Dilemma

Between Japan and China, particularly over territorial disputes, it is necessary to address both the fairness dilemma and the security dilemma. Remedying one alone is insufficient.

For the security dilemma, decades of thinking have identified generally accepted recommendations. Consider recent classic and sensible recommendations by Steinberg and O’Hanlon on a U.S.-China security dilemma. They propose focusing on projecting resolve and enhancing transparency to reduce uncertainty; confidence building and reciprocating positive actions; and restraining defensive actions that might appear threatening. Such measures would mitigate the fear and uncertainty driving the security dilemma in Japanese-Chinese relations, but not the pursuit of fairness driving the fairness dilemma. While Japan and China have primary responsibility, the United States can and should contribute. Four policy recommendations could together enable a breakthrough, in a strategy we call “one step back, three steps forward.”

First, looking back, all sides could learn from examples of overcoming the fairness dilemma—not just the lesson of German apologies so often prescribed for Japan, but also lessons to all sides from Northern Ireland and the past Chinese-Japanese relationship itself. Apologies’ importance must not be minimized, but apologies can only ever be half the story. Apologies only mean something if accompanied by a process of self-reflection that internalizes historical lessons—and this is crucial for both sides in the fairness dilemma. Looking back should not be confused with dwelling on the past or demanding atonement, which inevitably lead to high human and economic costs by postponing true reconciliation. Leaders should constantly remind people of these opportunity costs.

In Northern Ireland, peace was a process where the parties prioritized their future, despite bitter injustices perceived by all sides. Success required leadership and concessions on both sides. Martin McGuinness was the likely IRA chief of staff when they killed the Queen’s cousin in 1979—now he’s deputy first minister and he recently toasted the Queen at Windsor Castle. Truth-seeking is necessary, but without recrimination and prosecution is often most constructive.

China and Japan themselves showed they can move on. They tried to avoid historical discussions while fostering bilateral relations from the 1970s to the 1990s, with regular summits and expanding trade and cultural interaction. As Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping said in 1978, let bygones be bygones.” In 1978 in Tokyo, Deng declared, “My heart is full of joy,” and hugged the Japanese prime minister. Japan provided significant development aid to China. And after the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, Japan first sought to ease Beijing’s isolation by resuming assistance loans in 1990, and Prime Minister Kaifu was the first G-7 leader to visit China in 1991. Today, the two countries’ competing historical narratives can no longer be shelved, and leaders on both sides must steer the truth-seeking process away from politics and towards long-term bilateral dialogue.

Addressing the fairness dilemma also requires proactive shaping of future relations among China, Japan and the United States. A first step forward is anticipating factors that may exacerbate the fairness dilemma—and a crucial example is helping Japan and China develop forms of nationalism that will not inflame this dynamic. China must recognize Japan requires a national identity that fosters social cohesion and enables defense of national interests; but not one that airbrushes uncomfortable historical chapters. Similarly, Japan must recognize China requires its own nationalism, but not with an anti-Japanese centerpiece.

So, what types of nationalism? Japanese prime minister Murayama’s 1995 statement apologizing for the war stated: “Japan must eliminate self-righteous nationalism.” As this is of concern in all countries, they could steer towards nationalism that fosters pride, while accepting the same by neighbors.

In a second step forward, Washington can facilitate processes to tackle one source of the fairness dilemma: the differing contemporary governmental ideas of what is fair and just. That is, while Japan stresses pure objective law, instead China incorporates a broader historical context that it thinks leaves certain sovereignty questions open from when it was weak (and which it seeks to address while strong). Government and academic dialogues could help understand each idea, and eventually bring together both. One legalistic strand could focus on maritime law, such as the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. This could build on work in the West Pacific Naval Symposium between regional naval leaders. Meanwhile, a historical or academic strand would examine sources of perceived injustice and clarify facts. Bringing both strands together would begin to put the differing ideas in the same space, even if disagreement remains, and identify plausible common ground on which to seek compromise over time.

For the third step forward, China and Japan (together with the United States and other interested nations) should begin to develop a rules-based system for the East China Sea that reconciles competing concepts of fairness. This would describe how to resolve certain disagreements over resource extraction, maritime security and the maritime environment, while being coupled with nonviolent measures for rule enforcement. The process of creation is key. It should be developed mutually to avoid perceptions that China must play by others’ rules; and without prejudging the outcome.

An analogy is the decades-long process that eventually formed the World Trade Organization. Despite conflicting views of fairness for trade governance and dispute settlement, the parties negotiated a combination of universal standards with country-specific entrance rules, including acceptable enforcement. An evolving rules-based system will be no panacea, as demonstrated by the slow progress developing the declaration of conduct in the South China Sea signed in 2002 between the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and China. Full reconciliation may never happen, but the actors need a plausible basis for moving forward and a concrete goal.

Ultimately, this could lead to Japan making a major concession to its current position, such that it accepts China’s contention that the underlying facts related to sovereignty of the islands are in dispute. But this would only have value for Japan if accompanied by Chinese inclusion in a credible multilateral framework that restricted further Chinese expansion and shared resources fairly in currently contested areas. This is the objective win-win scenario for both, where each gains materially beyond the current situation and takes a step back from absolutist positions over sovereignty. It bridges the dual need for security and fairness, but requires a process that can lead us there.

***

If policy makers want to be realistic, they must understand the world as it is. Fairness is important, and this is based in our biology. Because what is fair according to Japanese and Chinese perspectives is currently incompatible, this can lead to tragedy. The security-dilemma concept was innovative and useful, because it described a recurring physical and psychological problem in international relations—making it a tangible problem for which policies could be developed. In the same way, the fairness dilemma captures a problem and so helps make it addressable. Simple solutions don’t exist for either the fairness dilemma, or the security dilemma. Both require leadership and political will to mitigate, and for a long time, leaders may at best hope to limit their effects. Identifying the fairness dilemma can start the critical debate about how to prevent it from leading to tragedy.

Nicholas D. Wright is a neuroscientist and an associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. James L. Schoff is a senior associate in Carnegie’s Asia Program.
 
The Asian Paradox by Yoon Young-kwan - Project Syndicate

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ECONOMICS
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YOON YOUNG-KWAN
Yoon Young-kwan, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea, is Professor of International Relations at Seoul National University.

NOV 4, 2014
The Asian Paradox
SEOUL – Given that the 21 members of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum account for some 54% of global GDP and about 44% of world trade, the agenda for this month’s APEC summit should be drawing much global attention. Yet the only issue in which anyone seems interested is whether or not Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will meet on the sidelines, and, if they do, whether a substantive discussion to ease bilateral tensions will take place.

Of course, this is not altogether unreasonable, given the two countries’ importance in shaping East Asia’s future. Indeed, the uncertainty about whether two of APEC’s key leaders will even speak to each other highlights the grim reality of Asian international relations today. The supposed “Asian century” is being thwarted by a paradox: deep economic interdependence has done nothing to alleviate strategic mistrust.

Given the recent deterioration of Sino-Japanese relations – a decline that accelerated in 2012, when Japan purchased the disputed Senkaku Islands (Diaoyu Islands in Chinese) from their private owner to prevent Japanese nationalists from taking control of them – the mere fact that Abe will attend the summit is a major step. A meeting between Abe and Xi – their first since either came to power – would offer concrete grounds for hope.

The Japanese government has made significant diplomatic efforts to orchestrate a meeting, with former Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda visiting Beijing in July to try to ease tensions. According to some media reports, in order to secure China’s agreement to participate in a meeting during the APEC summit, Abe even agreed to acknowledge that Japan’s claim to the Senkaku Islands is disputed.

Given that such a move would imply that China’s claim to the islands may have some legitimacy, Abe’s possible concession on this point is no trivial matter; it could even mean that he will agree with China to restore the status quo ante. In that case, one hopes that Xi will follow Deng Xiaoping’s counsel and allow the issue to be “shelved for some time” so that the “wiser” next generation can “find a solution acceptable to all.”

That now seems to be a realistic possibility. Indeed, lately Xi seems to have softened his tone, if not necessarily his diplomatic line. For example, he allowed Li Xiaolin, the daughter of a former Chinese president, to meet with Abe, with whom she watched a performance by a visiting Chinese dance troupe in Tokyo. And Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang shook hands with Abe at the recent Asia-Europe Meeting in Milan.

One reason for Abe and Xi’s newfound flexibility may be domestic political shifts in both countries, which have created a more equal balance between conservative, nationalist groups and more internationally-oriented business interests. With both leaders having spent the last two years overcoming domestic opponents and consolidating their power, they may have gained confidence in their ability to compromise.

In Japan, Abe has satisfied his conservative supporters with cabinet resolutions to allow for expanded self-defense. Despite domestic opposition to Japan’s new security doctrine, no politically influential group was able to organize an effective challenge to Abe’s approach.

Now, as Japan’s economic recovery stalls, the country’s business sector seems to be pressuring Abe’s government to work harder to mitigate the impact of its deteriorating relationship with China. According to a Chinese government report, in the first half of 2014, Japanese direct investment in China was almost 50% lower than during the same period last year – a clear sign that Japanese business leaders fear for the future in Japan’s second largest market.

Meanwhile, in China, Xi has gained considerable confidence through his massive anti-corruption campaign, with the punishment of top military officers indicating that he has solidified his control over the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). As a result, Xi may believe that he now has more space to address the country’s economic slowdown, including by lessening the damage wrought by weakening ties with Japan.

If this assessment is accurate, the obvious next question is how much further Abe and Xi can move toward détente, thereby appeasing their business sectors, without losing the backing of nationalists, who tend to view the bilateral relationship as a zero-sum game.

For Abe, the choice is whether to tone down his nationalist rhetoric and moderate his position on contentious historical issues. This would include halting visits to the controversial Yasukuni shrine (which honors, among others, 14 Class A war criminals who were executed after World War II) and abandoning revisionism regarding the Korean “comfort women” who were forced to provide sexual services to the Japanese Imperial Army. How Abe decides is likely to depend on his confidence in his political position.

Similarly, if Xi remains confident enough in his control of the PLA and truly follows China’s official policy of “peaceful development,” he will be able to take the kind of prudent approach that Deng advocated. This would entail recognizing and trying to assuage the fears that China’s rise is causing among its neighbors, as Otto von Bismarck did after German unification in 1871. Observers might then read his recent efforts to improve relations with Japan, not to mention Vietnam, as a genuine strategic shift, rather than a temporary tactical adjustment.

In this uncertain context, the APEC summit could shed much-needed light on the intentions of Abe and Xi, thereby providing crucial insight into the trajectory of Sino-Japanese relations – and thus the future of East Asia.

The Asian Paradox by Yoon Young-kwan - Project Syndicate


Read more at The Asian Paradox by Yoon Young-kwan - Project Syndicate
 
In this uncertain context, the APEC summit could shed much-needed light on the intentions of Abe and Xi, thereby providing crucial insight into the trajectory of Sino-Japanese relations – and thus the future of East Asia.

Here is to the future of East Asia. Long may it be peaceful, and filled with fortune for Japan, China and Korea(s). :cheers:
 
European Union, Arab league, African Union, Council of the Americas but no Pan Asian equivalent. Is Asian integration a dream?
 
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