Japan’s Sanae Takaichi moves to ease weeks of tensions with China over the Taiwan Strait
Tokyo’s position on the island is unchanged, the Japanese prime minister says in an apparent climbdown
Responding to a lawmaker’s question on Wednesday, Takaichi told the Japanese parliament that Tokyo’s position on the island remained unchanged and referred to a 1972 commitment that led to the normalisation of ties between Beijing and Tokyo.
“The Japanese government’s basic position regarding Taiwan remains as stated in the 1972 Japan-China Joint Communique, and there has been no change to this position,” Takaichi said.
What US-Japan military exercises can tell us about their plans for a Taiwan conflict
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s recent remarks started a major row with Beijing and shone a fresh spotlight on Japan’s strategic thinking
It also follows a steady build-up of supplies and equipment in the region by Japan’s main ally, the United States, in the past three months.
Yonaguni is the westernmost island in the Ryukyu chain, which would be a key strategic location in the event of a conflict over Taiwan.
The Japanese military has already spent years planning operations based on this precise scenario and although specific details have never been officially disclosed, past joint US-Japan exercises can help shed some light on their likely operational plan.
Her comments triggered the ongoing diplomatic row with Beijing, which regards the remarks as interference in its internal affairs and has demanded she retract them.
However, reports that the Japanese and US military were drafting a joint operational plan for a crisis in the Taiwan Strait first emerged in 2021, with media reports saying this would include the establishment of temporary offensive bases in the Ryukyu chain.