Report
What does China Want re: Senkakus, South China Sea, Part 1
posted by Richard Katz on July 09, 2014
Report Cover
Headline
Beijing felt that its attempt to isolate Shinzo Abe both within Japan and internationally had failed; so it is trying to decide what to do
Abstract
We had a chance to speak with Chinese experts in Beijing on national security issues; they ranged from professors at universities to experts at government-affiliated think-tanks
Aside from some obligatory parroting of the party line on delicate issues, they were surprising frank, and quite willing to speak as objective analysts trying to understand the leadership’s motivations and ambitions, rather than acting as spokesmen for it
On the Senkakus, they all spoke of the “new status quo,” so that any return to “shelving” would return to the “new status quo” rather than the status quo prior to Japan’s 2012 nationalization
The new status quo meant that Japan had nationalized the islands and China sends its vessels into the territorial waters; so any “shelving” would merely reduce, but not eliminate such actions
Beijing felt that its attempt to isolate Shinzo Abe both within Japan and internationally had failed; so it is trying to decide what to do
China, said our sources, initiated the first Cabinet-level meeting since the 2012 nationalization when China’s Commerce Minister and Japan’s METI Minister met on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue
Beijing is now considering whether it is worthwhile having a summit between Xi and Abe on the sidelines of the APEC summit in November; to do so, Abe would have to promise to refrain from visiting Yasukuni again and make some sort of acknowledgement of a dispute regarding the Senkakus
Experts unclear about Beijing’s motivations/ambitions in South China Sea, worried about crudeness of Xi’s tactics