Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThe current geo-political issues surrounding the historically Chinese Diaoyu Islands are a relic of Japanese Imperialism and post-WWII politics of the United States. This film take a deeper ... Leer todoThe current geo-political issues surrounding the historically Chinese Diaoyu Islands are a relic of Japanese Imperialism and post-WWII politics of the United States. This film take a deeper look at this subject to provide clarity that is currently escaping the majority of news ag... Leer todoThe current geo-political issues surrounding the historically Chinese Diaoyu Islands are a relic of Japanese Imperialism and post-WWII politics of the United States. This film take a deeper look at this subject to provide clarity that is currently escaping the majority of news agencies and Western understanding.
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This article was written if www.forbes.com by Stephen Harner on Feb. 20, 2013 and can be searched online.
The new book on the Senkaku/Diaoyu island crisis by Yabuki Susumu (矢吹晋), professor emeritus of Yokohama City University, one of Japan's most eminent China scholars. The book (written in Japanese) is entitled:「尖閣問題の核心 」(The Core of the Senkaku Issue), and bears a subtitle:「日中関係はどうなる」 (What is to Become of Japan-China Relations). I believe that the book is the fairest and most objective, as well as the most thorough, exposition of the positions of both Japan and China, and–critically–the U.S., on the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands dispute. At the risk of oversimplifying, I think I can summarize
Professor Yabuki's analysis and conclusions as follows:
1. The Japanese position on the Senkaku/Diaoyu issue is indefensible on several counts, including most fundamentally Japan's unconditional acceptance of the terms of the Potsdam Declaration (which required the return of all territories "stolen" from China).
2. The Meiji government's annexation of the Ryuku Islands (theretofore an autonomous kingdom) in January 1885, within which the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands were identified, followed three months later by the Qing Dynasty's surrender of Taiwan and the Pescadores to Japan in the Treaty of Shimonoseki (ending the Sino-Japanese War) are both mooted by the terms of Potsdam. The islands were and are clearly part of Taiwan, which in addition has the most legitimate claim to continuous use/occupation.
3. The Japanese position that Senkaku/Diaoyu is part of Japanese territory because it was awarded to Japan by the U.S. in the Okinawa Reversion agreement of 1971 is similarly contrary to fact. The U.S. awarded to Japan only administrative authority over the islands, not sovereignty. Sovereignty was specifically not transferred. The U.S. continued to maintain was undetermined between the three claimants and would only be determined through discussion and agreement. (As I noted in the last post, the Obama administration–in a monumental blunder–effectively changed this policy by failing to object to and stop Japanese "nationalization.")
4. Japanese policy–and particularly public misunderstanding–has been based on the false assertion, uttered by then foreign minister Fukuda Takeo in testimony to the Upper House of Diet on December 15, 1971 that Okinawa Reversion had accomplished the restoration of Japanese sovereignty over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands. Whether Fukuda misunderstood the issue, or intended to deliberately deceive the country through this testimony is unclear.
5. The Chinese position on handling the territorial issue was, before Japanese "nationalization," grounded on the 1972 agreement between Prime Minister Tanaka Kakue- Premier Zhou Enlai, when the terms of Japan-China diplomatic relations were determined, to "shelve" the issue–i.e., to avoid any acts that sought to enforce one side's claim to sovereignty.
6. Yabuki cites his own research and authoritative third party sources to charge that the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs removed from official transcripts of the Tanaka-Zhou discussions that agreement to "shelve" the issue, allowing future Japanese governments to fraudulently claim that the issue was not discussed and that China asserted a claim over the islands.
7. Under the circumstances above, the decision of the Noda government to "nationalize" the islands was a grave provocation, a fundamental change in the status quo, tantamount from the Chinese point of view to aggression and forceful annexation of Chinese territory. An equivalently forceful Chinese response to "balance" the level of its sovereign claim was inevitable.
Come china stop trying to take over the world , did work well for Nazis :P
I praise the director, as one of many American, can be critical of US foreign policy. (US government is "for the people" internally, but very bossy in foreign policy. It is based on the "US interest" which can be very subjective, biased and war prone.) This kind of criticism is very much lacking in China and Japan. I hope that there will be more different and balanced voices coming out of China and Japan (and oversea Chinese/Japanese). Such will be the first step toward "reconciliation" in the short term. Government recent actions (from US, Japan and China) were generally useless if not hazardous.
One minor issue: I didn't give it a 10 because it didn't mention (enough) about Taiwan, which is the closest populous land to Daioyu island. It is a major traditional fishing area of Taiwan's fisherman. Taiwan should have a bigger (if not major) say on the subject.
The US play a very negative role in dispute In 1971, the United States appointed Japan as the administrator of the Diaoyu Islands. But China has never recognized the right of administration of the US or Japan. Officially the United States does not take a position on the ultimate sovereignty of the Diaoyu Islands, but it does recognize the islands fall under the security treaty obligations the US has with Japan. There are still serious doubts about the possibility for the US to play a constructive role in this ongoing dispute. WHATEVER, THE ISLANDS BELONGS TO CHINA!
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