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China, Japan Try to Tamp Down Maritime Tensions

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On Monday, Chinese and Japanese defense authorities sat down to discuss how to manage tensions stemming from a territorial dispute in the East China Sea. Both sides are trying to finalize details of a hotline that will allow leaders from both sides to communicate in the event of an emergency, as well as other strategies for avoiding accidents at sea or in the air. Setting up a maritime consultative mechanism is seen as a crucial step in managing tensions arising from the Senkaku/Diaoyu territorial dispute.

A general agreement to hammer out a maritime consultative mechanism was reached in 2012 – just before China-Japan relations took a nosedive over the Japanese nationalization of the disputed Senkaku-Diaoyu Islands. The first round of talks, held in May 2012, was also the last for over two years. With talks suspended, many worried that heightened tensions and increased patrols in the disputed region could lead to a disastrous accident – exactly the sort of scenario a consultative mechanism is designed to prevent.

The second round of talks took place in Qingdao, Shandong province, on September 23 and 24 of last year. That meeting, led by Yi Xianliang, the deputy director-general of the Chinese Foreign Ministry’s Department of Boundary and Ocean Affairs and Makita Shimokawa, deputy director-general of the Japanese Foreign Ministry’s Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau, provided an early sign that a thaw in China-Japan relations was on the horizon. During that meeting, China and Japan agreed in principle to resume liaisons between their maritime departments, with the goal of putting in place a maritime communication mechanism as early as possible.

The talks today, held in Japan, were the next step toward that goal. The working-level talks were designed to make progress on the details of a hotline that will allow Japanese and Chinese defense authorities to directly contact each other in case of an emergency. Last November, Chinese Major General Qian Lihua told China Military Onlinethat China and Japan had already reached a “principled and unsigned agreement” on basic technical issues during the initial talks prior to 2012. Qian predicted the two militaries would hold another round of consultations in the near future, and indicated that China and Japan might actually ink an agreement “if conditions are ripe.”

The goal, according to the Japan Times, is to officially launch a maritime crisis management mechanism by the end of 2015. Monday’s talks, which brought together officials from China’s Defense Ministry and Japan’s Defense Ministry and Maritime Self-Defense Force, talked about technical details, including what common radio frequency vessels and aircraft from both sides should use in the area surrounding the disputed islands.

A commentary from Xinhuapraised this week’s talks as “an encouraging sign [that] offers another opportunity for tension reduction.” However, the commentary also emphasized that the talks, originally started in 2012, had been “disrupted thanks to Japan’s irresponsible moves.” “Good faith from Japan is essential to the success of this week’s meeting,” the article said.

In reaching a four-point consensus on their bilateral relationship last November, China and Japan purposefully used ambiguous diplo-speak to avoid the central issue of the Senkaku/Diaoyu dispute. The two sides agreed that they hold “different positions… regarding the tensions” that exist over the islands – not that they hold different position on the actual question of sovereignty over the islands. The difference in key, as Tokyo has steadfastly refused to recognize the existence of a dispute despite China’s demands. Chinese media tended to interpret Japan’s “concession” in the four-point consensus more broadly than it was intended – Japanese officials have made it crystal clear that Tokyo did not intended to recognize a territorial dispute exists. Thus, Xinhua’s exhortation that Japan must “stick to the four-point principle agreement reached with Beijing last November” could prove problematic if the ambiguity of that agreement is not allowed to remain.

The Xinhua article makes it clear that China-Japan tensions are far from over. Beijing is still greatly concerned about Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s move to strengthen Japan’s defense forces, and continues to see such moves as “dangerous” and “provocative.” Meanwhile, China’s recent launch of a new website outlining its claims to the Diaoyu Islands proves that Beijing has no intention of letting the territorial dispute simmer on a back burner.

Under the circumstances, it’s more crucial than ever for China and Japan to take advantage of what might prove to be a temporary lull in tensions to finalize a maritime consultative mechanism. Such an agreement will help stabilize the East China Sea during the next storm in China-Japan relations.


China, Japan Try to Tamp Down Maritime Tensions | The Diplomat
 
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China, Japan hold new round of maritime talks
Xinhua, January 21, 2015


China's Foreign Ministry confirmed the third round of high-level consultations on maritime affairs between China and Japan on Wednesday.

The talks, held between officials from both countries' foreign ministries, defense ministries and other maritime affairs departments, are being held in Japan and will last three days, said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying at a daily press briefing.

The China-Japan high-level consultations on maritime affairs were set up in January 2012 with the first round of talks held in May of the same year in Hangzhou, capital city of east China's Zhejiang Province.

The second round of talks was held last September in Qingdao, a coastal city in east China's Shandong Province.

According to Hua, the high-level talks are a comprehensive way to coordinate and communicate between maritime affairs departments of the two countries.

The two sides exchanged views on East China Sea-related affairs as well as maritime cooperation under the mechanism, she added.
 
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China, Japan hold new round of maritime talks
Xinhua, January 21, 2015


China's Foreign Ministry confirmed the third round of high-level consultations on maritime affairs between China and Japan on Wednesday.

The talks, held between officials from both countries' foreign ministries, defense ministries and other maritime affairs departments, are being held in Japan and will last three days, said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying at a daily press briefing.

The China-Japan high-level consultations on maritime affairs were set up in January 2012 with the first round of talks held in May of the same year in Hangzhou, capital city of east China's Zhejiang Province.

The second round of talks was held last September in Qingdao, a coastal city in east China's Shandong Province.

According to Hua, the high-level talks are a comprehensive way to coordinate and communicate between maritime affairs departments of the two countries.

The two sides exchanged views on East China Sea-related affairs as well as maritime cooperation under the mechanism, she added.

Look how fast China and Japan can find a way to work with each other. :)
 
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We wish tomorrow Xi and Abe shake each other's hands with smiles.
 
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Yes, Abe knows that his abenomic can't wait too long without China involved.

This year , alone, the trade between Japan and China is nearing $400 Billion (US dollars) Per annum. That's around 2.48 Trillion CNY. We should increase trade to $500 Billion or more. :)

That's the largest level of trade in the entire Asian Continent.
 
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This year , alone, the trade between Japan and China is nearing $400 Billion (US dollars) Per annum. That's around 2.48 Trillion CNY. We should increase trade to $500 Billion or more. :)

That's the largest level of trade in the entire Asian Continent.

I guess, absent a major political accident, the half a trillion dollar bilateral trade is attainable before the end of the decade.
 
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I believe Chinsee and Japanese leaders had done quite well quieting down on disputed islands issue.

China used to publish something everyday on globaltimes about that but now a much lesser amount.

There seems to be a de facto understanding in Japanese leaders to not speak of disputed islands and not developed it.
 
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I believe Chinsee and Japanese leaders had done quite well quieting down on disputed islands issue.

China used to publish something everyday on globaltimes about that but now a much lesser amount.

There seems to be a de facto understanding in Japanese leaders to not speak of disputed islands and not developed it.

It is not about publishing stuff on paper. What matters is political reconciliation. People to people relationship has never decreased even at a time political tension was running high.

The understanding between the two governments is to shelve the dispute for the later generations to tackle and instead focus on the existing opportunities.
 
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It is not about publishing stuff on paper. What matters is political reconciliation. People to people relationship has never decreased even at a time political tension was running high.

The understanding between the two governments is to shelve the dispute for the later generations to tackle and instead focus on the existing opportunities.

The dispute was used as pretext for greater dependence on the United States as a guarantor for peaceful intervention. What has happened is -- unexpected and unprecedented -- that Sino-Japanese channels , through direct intergovernment communication, was able to not only understand there is a dispute, but to develop mechanisms to reduce tension and to facilitate cooperation. Absent of US influence and interference.

This is , in my opinion, victory for Japan because it shows to us and to our peers that we can take care of our selves and deal with China on our own. This is most probably taken into consideration when Diet is to make decisions on new defense review. This should encourage more independent mechanisms...
 
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On Monday, Chinese and Japanese defense authorities sat down to discuss how to manage tensions stemming from a territorial dispute in the East China Sea. Both sides are trying to finalize details of a hotline that will allow leaders from both sides to communicate in the event of an emergency, as well as other strategies for avoiding accidents at sea or in the air. Setting up a maritime consultative mechanism is seen as a crucial step in managing tensions arising from the Senkaku/Diaoyu territorial dispute.

A general agreement to hammer out a maritime consultative mechanism was reached in 2012 – just before China-Japan relations took a nosedive over the Japanese nationalization of the disputed Senkaku-Diaoyu Islands. The first round of talks, held in May 2012, was also the last for over two years. With talks suspended, many worried that heightened tensions and increased patrols in the disputed region could lead to a disastrous accident – exactly the sort of scenario a consultative mechanism is designed to prevent.

The second round of talks took place in Qingdao, Shandong province, on September 23 and 24 of last year. That meeting, led by Yi Xianliang, the deputy director-general of the Chinese Foreign Ministry’s Department of Boundary and Ocean Affairs and Makita Shimokawa, deputy director-general of the Japanese Foreign Ministry’s Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau, provided an early sign that a thaw in China-Japan relations was on the horizon. During that meeting, China and Japan agreed in principle to resume liaisons between their maritime departments, with the goal of putting in place a maritime communication mechanism as early as possible.

The talks today, held in Japan, were the next step toward that goal. The working-level talks were designed to make progress on the details of a hotline that will allow Japanese and Chinese defense authorities to directly contact each other in case of an emergency. Last November, Chinese Major General Qian Lihua told China Military Onlinethat China and Japan had already reached a “principled and unsigned agreement” on basic technical issues during the initial talks prior to 2012. Qian predicted the two militaries would hold another round of consultations in the near future, and indicated that China and Japan might actually ink an agreement “if conditions are ripe.”

The goal, according to the Japan Times, is to officially launch a maritime crisis management mechanism by the end of 2015. Monday’s talks, which brought together officials from China’s Defense Ministry and Japan’s Defense Ministry and Maritime Self-Defense Force, talked about technical details, including what common radio frequency vessels and aircraft from both sides should use in the area surrounding the disputed islands.

A commentary from Xinhuapraised this week’s talks as “an encouraging sign [that] offers another opportunity for tension reduction.” However, the commentary also emphasized that the talks, originally started in 2012, had been “disrupted thanks to Japan’s irresponsible moves.” “Good faith from Japan is essential to the success of this week’s meeting,” the article said.

In reaching a four-point consensus on their bilateral relationship last November, China and Japan purposefully used ambiguous diplo-speak to avoid the central issue of the Senkaku/Diaoyu dispute. The two sides agreed that they hold “different positions… regarding the tensions” that exist over the islands – not that they hold different position on the actual question of sovereignty over the islands. The difference in key, as Tokyo has steadfastly refused to recognize the existence of a dispute despite China’s demands. Chinese media tended to interpret Japan’s “concession” in the four-point consensus more broadly than it was intended – Japanese officials have made it crystal clear that Tokyo did not intended to recognize a territorial dispute exists. Thus, Xinhua’s exhortation that Japan must “stick to the four-point principle agreement reached with Beijing last November” could prove problematic if the ambiguity of that agreement is not allowed to remain.

The Xinhua article makes it clear that China-Japan tensions are far from over. Beijing is still greatly concerned about Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s move to strengthen Japan’s defense forces, and continues to see such moves as “dangerous” and “provocative.” Meanwhile, China’s recent launch of a new website outlining its claims to the Diaoyu Islands proves that Beijing has no intention of letting the territorial dispute simmer on a back burner.

Under the circumstances, it’s more crucial than ever for China and Japan to take advantage of what might prove to be a temporary lull in tensions to finalize a maritime consultative mechanism. Such an agreement will help stabilize the East China Sea during the next storm in China-Japan relations.


China, Japan Try to Tamp Down Maritime Tensions | The Diplomat
There will be peace if Japanese neighbors stayed in the east sea area of Okinawa trough.
 
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Good news.However,there is still a long way to repair the relations between China and Japan.
 
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More like Abe realized his abenomic will not work unless China is involved. Remember few last year, Japan publish a lot of hostile article about China lock fire radar , fighter jet provoking near their plane and evil intention of ADIZ plus frequent intrude of diaoyutai. But after the 4quarter disaster result of Japan growth. Abe keep quiet and is desperate to make his abenomic work. Without China buying large number of Japanese goods. A second stRaight year of negative growth will be end of abe political career.
 
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Chinese invest 36b yen in Japanese real estate
By Li Jingrong
China.org.cn, January 26, 2015

Chinese private capital has become a major force in Japan's real estate sector, with investment reaching 36 billion yen (US$304 million) last year, Xinhua reported on Thursday.

Following an active influx of overseas capital, the Japanese real estate market has enjoyed rapid development. International investors, including those from China, have shown keen interest in the sector.

Statistics from an institute on the future of urban areas under Japan's Mizuho Trust & Banking Co., Ltd. show that in 2014, more than US$10 billion in foreign capital poured into the property market, about a fifth of the country's total real estate volume. The focus has been on high-grade properties, particularly in the downtown areas of Tokyo.

The U.S. group Blackstone spent 190 billion yen (US$1.6 billion) last year on more than 5,000 residential buildings in the Japanese capital. China's Fosun Group invested 70 billion yen (US$590 million) in a 25-storey office building located near Shinagawa Station in one of Tokyo's inner city business districts.

Investment funds from the United States, France and Germany also bought office buildings and comprehensive commercial facilities in Tokyo's Shinagawa, Shinjuku and Nakano wards.

An interesting trend is that an increasing numbers of individuals are also actively investing in Japanese property, including many Chinese wealthy people. Japan's Real Estate Institute predicted that in the past year, at least 36 billion yen (US$300 million) of Chinese private capital poured into the real estate market. As a result, many Japanese real estate companies have increased their Chinese-speaking staff.

One of the reasons for the trend is that investors think the real estate market in Japan's large cities has considerable potential for growth.

In recent years, average land prices have declined sharply across the nation, although some areas are beginning to rebound. Last year, prices of commercial and residential land in Tokyo, Nagoya and Osaka started to rise again, with the vacancy rate of office buildings in downtown Tokyo dropping to five percent, and residential housing prices rebounding.

However, the overall price of Japanese real estate is still low. Currently the corresponding prices for most ordinary residential houses in Tokyo are less than or equal to prices in Beijing and Shanghai.

Tokyo will host the 2020 Olympic Games. Investors believe it is likely that Tokyo's real estate will undergo a major revaluation before the event.

In addition, Japan's real estate rental ratio is reasonable, and the property investment return rate is holding steady at 6-8 percent. All these factors have helped stimulate overseas interest.

There are no restrictions on foreign investment in the Japanese real estate sector. In addition, the government has worked hard to increase the liquidity of the market by progressively lowering capital gains, registration and license taxes on real estate.
 
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