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Abe's wishful anti-China thinking exposed at G7 summit

By Chen Shilei (Xinhua)    13:07, June 05, 2014
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BEIJING, June 5 -- Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe must feel disappointed now.

The Group of Seven (G7) summit on Wednesday wisely stopped short of taking a pro-Japan stand over the East China Sea issue, dealing a blow to Japanese officials and media that have been trying to sell an anti-China agenda in the runup to the meeting.

A communique issued after the first day of the two-day summit in Brussels only read that the G7 opposes "any unilateral attempt by any party to assert its territorial or maritime claims through the use of intimidation, coercion or force."

The statement did not mention any specific country, not to mention China.

Japanese officials, including Abe, might believe this amounted to a veiled warning to China, but such a measured statement could serve as a reminder to right-leaning Japan too.

Given Japan's hawkish foreign policies and its unrepentant attitude towards history, it is delusional to think the G7, which consists of the United States, Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan, would take a unified anti-China stand.

Many of the G7 members, particularly Germany, France and Britain, have important bilateral relations with China, which makes it impossible for them to pull Japan's chestnuts out of the fire.

After all, given the G7's waning global influence and its ongoing confrontation with Russia over the Ukraine crisis, it is not like the group's words on the South and East China issues will make much difference.

The real top issue at the G7 summit is still the Ukraine crisis. If Abe counts on other Western leaders to form an anti-China alliance at the meeting, he is destined to be disappointed.

Any wise Western policy-makers will not act the fool to decide to jointly contain China as they clearly know this will only harm their own national interests.

Besides, it is not China that has provoked tensions in East Asia. The China-Japan dispute over the Diaoyu Islands drastically worsened only after Japan moved to change the status quo by "nationalizing" some of the islands.

For China, such a move is completely unacceptable because it not only betrayed an unwritten agreement between the two countries to shelve the issue for future generations to solve, but also amounts to a unilateral and substantial plan to snatching the islands from China.

If the G7 really wants to do some good to Asia, they should be cautious about Japan's nationalist ambitions and work to restrain its dangerous adventurist policies.

(Editor:Sun Zhao、Yao Chun)

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