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Inside the Ring

A classified 1969 map produced by the People's Republic of China official map authority lists the A classified 1969 map produced by the People's Republic of China official map authority lists the "Senkaku Islands" as Japanese territory, underming Beijing's more recent claims that the islands it calls the Daiyoutai Islands are Chinese territory. The map bolsters Tokyo's claims to the sovereignty.
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China-Japan tensions

U.S. officials are monitoring rising tensions between China and Japan over Japan's detention of a Chinese fishing boat captain who is accused of ramming his boat into two Japanese patrol boats near the Senkaku islands north of Taiwan and south of Okinawa.

The islands have been Japanese territory for decades and were even recognized as such in China's Communist Party People's Daily many years ago.

But since 1970, China — based on growing nationalist sentiment — publicly laid claim to the island chain, which Beijing calls the Diaoyu. Taiwan also claims the islands, further complicating the territorial dispute.

Inside the Ring has obtained a classified Chinese map that is likely to further muddy Beijing's territorial claims. The 1969 map, produced by the People's Republic of China map authority and labeled "confidential," lists the islands as "Senkaku," the Japanese name, and contains a dividing line south of the islands indicating that they fall within Japanese territory.

The map contradicts the statement on Tuesday by Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu, who told reporters: "The Diaoyu Islands have always been Chinese territory since ancient times, and this is the fact that nobody can ever change. China owns indisputable sovereignty over the Diaoyu Islands. The Chinese government's will and determination to safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity is firm and unshakable."

Amid the tensions, the USS George Washington aircraft carrier strike group is located several hundred miles from the area.

The latest dispute began Sept. 7, when a Chinese trawler near the Senkakus was ordered to halt fishing. According to Japanese reports, the trawler then rammed two Japanese patrol boats, triggering a naval chase and the captain's arrest.

Diplomatic protests began flying as China summoned Japanese diplomats several times to demand the captain's release, claiming Japan could not enforce its laws on Chinese territory.

China stepped up the protest by canceling a senior official's visit to Japan, and said plans to resume talks on a disputed undersea natural gas field were called off.

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© Copyright 2010 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

About the Author
Bill Gertz

Bill Gertz

Bill Gertz is geopolitics editor and a national security and investigative reporter for The Washington Times. He has been with The Times since 1985.

He is the author of six books, four of them national best-sellers. His latest book, “The Failure Factory,” on government bureaucracy and national security, was published in September 2008.

Mr. Gertz also writes a weekly column ...

Comments

New User 56cbf says:

1 week, 4 days ago

Mark as offensive

Names don't matter. Why? You see 黄尾屿 on the map ... that's the Chinese name. Japanese call it 久場島. You see the Chinese name 赤尾屿? Japanese call it 大正島. Here's the link if you don't believe me <http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%B0%96%E9%96%A3%E8%AB%B8%E5%B3%B6>. Chinese and Japanese sometimes interchange names, especially in the past.
IMO this map and caption should be taken down. It does NOT refer to any island as anyone's territory. It does NOT show where it came from at all. But then again, this IS the Washington Times we're talking about...

michigander62 says:

1 week, 4 days ago

Mark as offensive

What is with all of the stinking little aquares?

New User e39e4 says:

1 week, 5 days ago

Mark as offensive

尖閣 (尖阁) is a Japanese word, actually KUROIWA Hishashi (黒岩恒) named it in 1900.
That is why the Chinese government avoids using it.
魚釣島 (鱼钓岛) too is a Japanese word, Chinese people never put those characters in this order.
Do Chinese people know the fact Okinawan people lived there for over 40 years?
There was a village named "Koga mura (古賀村)" and 248 people lived there.
You can find a few pictures of Koga Village by googling with "尖閣" and "古賀村".
"Renmin Ribao (人民日报)" also stated Senkaku Islands is a part of Ryukyu Islands on Jan. 8th, 1953.
It says "琉球群岛散布在我国台湾东北和日本九洲岛西南之间的海面上,包括尖阁诸岛、先岛诸岛、大东诸岛、冲绳诸岛、大岛诸岛、土噶喇诸岛、大隅诸岛等七组岛屿,每组都有许多大小岛屿,总计共有五十个以上有名称的岛屿和四百多个无名小岛,全部陆地面积为四千六百七十平方公里。群岛中最大的岛是冲绳诸岛中的冲绳岛(即大琉球岛),面积一千二百十一平方公里;其次是大岛诸岛中的奄美大岛,面积七百三十平方公里。琉球群岛绵互达一千公里,它的内侧是我国东海,外侧就是太平洋公海。"

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