Asia

Japan and China eye each other warily—as usual

But Russia and Korea are adding to the tensions in North-East Asia

|beijing

RELATIONS between China and Japan have, since the end of the second world war, never been anything but prickly. A brutal shared history has left a lingering mutual animosity. So it was with a sense of grudging familiarity that the Japanese foreign minister, Yohei Kono, travelled to Beijing this week and tried to smooth over the latest tiff, involving a series of incursions into Japanese waters by Chinese naval and intelligence vessels. Japanese defence officials say that on 17 occasions this year Chinese ships have crossed into Japan's 200-mile (370km) economic exclusion zone.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Japan and China eye each other warily—as usual”

Asia’s shifting balance of power

From the September 2nd 2000 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Asia

Illustration of national flags, including those of the US, the UK, South Korea, Japan and Australia, tucked into a crisscrossing lattice

Can Donald Trump maintain Joe Biden’s network of Asian alliances?

Discipline and creativity will help, but so will China’s actions

An alleged North Korean soldier after being captured by the Ukrainian army

What North Korea gains by sending troops to fight for Russia

Resources, technology, experience and a blood-soaked IOU


FK Arkadag's Didar Durdyev runs during a Turkmen football championship game

Is Arkadag the world’s greatest football team?

What could possibly explain the success of a club founded by Turkmenistan’s dictator


After the president’s arrest, what next for South Korea?

Some 3,000 police breached his compound. The country is dangerously divided

India’s Faustian pact with Russia is strengthening

The gamble behind $17bn of fresh deals with the Kremlin on oil and arms

AUKUS enters its fifth year. How is the pact faring?

It has weathered two big political changes. What about Donald Trump’s return?