Parashuram1
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And why would the Japanese consider Chinese and Indians in an adversarial relationship? Both the Asian countries are perhaps the very few who have some significance in the world economies at the moment and therefore it would be a disaster if there's any conflict here which from what I know about Japanese would be never wished by them.
With Japanese decision to lean a bit away from the United States and to assert a bit of freedom in at least economic and foreign policies if not military ones, I think Tokyo would be more interested in taking both the countries along so as to form an Asian economic forum.
At this juncture or any, I don't expect any rift between either of the Asian countries and instead it would be more focused on fighting terrorism whether it is in the Chinese northwestern provinces or Indian northern.
Economic cooperation is so high that it has become almost like a mutual assured destruction policy.
Besides, there's enough already for the entire world to handle at the moment with terrorists running rampant in Afghanistan-Pakistan border, and bomb plots being discovered all over the world by radicalized youth.
With Japanese decision to lean a bit away from the United States and to assert a bit of freedom in at least economic and foreign policies if not military ones, I think Tokyo would be more interested in taking both the countries along so as to form an Asian economic forum.
At this juncture or any, I don't expect any rift between either of the Asian countries and instead it would be more focused on fighting terrorism whether it is in the Chinese northwestern provinces or Indian northern.
Economic cooperation is so high that it has become almost like a mutual assured destruction policy.
Besides, there's enough already for the entire world to handle at the moment with terrorists running rampant in Afghanistan-Pakistan border, and bomb plots being discovered all over the world by radicalized youth.