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China-Japan relations
ChinaDiplomacy

China-Japan row has left US’ Donald Trump facing ‘dilemma’: analyst

White House navigates backing long-time ally Japan while preserving trade truce with China amid fraying ties between the Asian neighbours

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Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi gestures as US President Donald Trump delivers a speech during their visit to the aircraft carrier USS George Washington in Yokosuka, Japan, on October 28. Photo: AP
Orange WangandZhao Ziwen

The Trump administration is possibly facing a “dilemma” as tensions between China and Japan intensify, one Chinese analyst has suggested, while another noted that any breakthrough in the diplomatic dispute still hinged on direct engagement between the two Asian neighbours.

This week, the downward spiral in ties between China and Japan showed no signs of easing.
Beijing issued another travel warning targeting Japan on Thursday – less than four weeks after its previous advisory – this time citing Monday’s 7.5-magnitude earthquake off the island nation’s northeastern coast.
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Also on Thursday, Tokyo confirmed that its fighter jets had flown over the Sea of Japan, or East Sea, the previous day alongside US nuclear-capable bombers, following a joint patrol by Chinese and Russian aircraft near Japanese airspace.

In a statement, the Japanese defence ministry said: ‘Through this training, Japan and the United States reaffirmed their strong resolve to prevent any unilateral change to the status quo by force, confirmed the readiness of the Self-Defence Forces and the US military and further strengthened the deterrence and response capabilities of the Japan-US alliance.”

Meanwhile, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi on Wednesday voiced hope that she would meet her US counterpart again amid Tokyo’s high tensions with Beijing.

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