I am not sure just what the Chinese leadership is thinking by allowing allowing even a whiff of military posturing. It is a really bad idea. They already have Taiwan, South Korea and even Vietnam sitting on their borders fully ready to fight a real war. An ounce of diplomacy and they would all stand down and almost go to sleep.
Instead they kick awake their own sleeping dog by challenging Japan over islands that could as easily be a cornerstone of a strategic alliance. The Japanese would have played.
The sooner that China comes under true multi party rule the better for all. Their naval build up will be answered soon enou8gh for the same reasons. The USA allowed its own foreign policy to be put largely under the United Nations for a good reason and this is it.
China is setting itself up for a massive humiliation that is totally avoidable.
China Is Accidentally Turning Japan Into a Global Military Power
By Joshua Philipp, Epoch Times | May 5, 2015
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http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1346055-china-is-accidentally-turning-japan-into-a-global-military-power/
In less than two years, Japan transformed from a pacifist nation to a
major military power willing and able to defend itself and its allies,
and new draft legislation will further its shift. You can thank China
for this.
While the changes don’t mean that Japan is immediately going to exert
its military globally, they mean that that time could soon come: they
will be able to join U.N. peacekeeping missions, defend their allies,
such as the United States, and even extend their defensive capabilities
into space.
Japan used to have its arms tied behind its back with Article 9 of
its constitution, which outlawed war as a means to settle disputes. But
in November 2013, the Chinese regime created an air defense zone over
the East China Sea that included the Senkaku islands, which are under
Japanese control yet claimed by the Chinese regime.
The Chinese regime didn’t let up. It threatened military action
against anyone who entered its defense zone without permission, and
began sending ships and jets into the territory. Japan didn’t back down.
According to an analysis of the U.S.–Japan defense alliance, from the
nonpartisan Congressional Research Service, the Japanese government is
now finalizing draft legislation for new security policies that may
reform the role of Japan in global military operations.
Debate over the draft legislation that could even allow Japan to
participate in U.N. peacekeeping missions, says the report, “will shine a
light on the willingness of Japan to become involved in conflicts for
the sake of aiding the United States, and on Japanese perceptions of the
security environment in East Asia.”
Japanese citizens are becoming more aware of the military climate. A
recent public opinion poll showed that 64 percent of Japanese think
China poses a military threat, which the report notes “may lead Japan to
shed more of its pacifist restrictions.”
The draft changes will affect Japan’s Mutual Defense Guidelines
(MDG), which it codified with the United States in 1978 and updated in
1997. The report states, “The new MDG accounts for developments in
military technology, improvements in interoperability of the U.S. and
Japanese militaries, and the complex nature of security threats in the
21st century.”
Chinese regime threatened military action against anyone who entered its defense zone without permission.
If passed, the new MDG would allow Japan to cooperate with the United
States on cybersecurity, the use of space for defense, and ballistic
missile defense. According to the report, “Under the banner of
collective self-defense, the Japanese military would be able to defend
U.S. vessels and aircraft, provide noncombat logistical support to U.S.
troops, and engage in minesweeping operations.”
Its proposed changes will also establish a standing “Alliance
Coordination Mechanism” that will involve agencies from the United
States and Japanese governments. According to the report, “This new
coordinating body removes the ‘seam’ between war and peace that had
inhibited alliance coordination during peacetime, such as during the
disaster relief response to the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in northeast
Japan.”
It states the “decision to enable collective self-defense will
facilitate Japan’s involvement in more U.S. conflicts, in more
significant ways” and will give more opportunities to the United States
and Japan through a deeper alliance.
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