Japan to Respond to CCP’s Economic Retaliation Appropriately, PM Says
.
The Japanese government will keep assessing the impact of Beijing’s reprisals on the nation’s economy, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said on Dec. 9, as the Chinese regime’s trade and diplomatic pressures on Tokyo escalated.
“We will closely monitor the situation, including the impact of a series of measures taken by the Chinese side, and respond appropriately,” Takaichi told a parliament committee.
Takaichi told lawmakers that the Japanese government remained open to various forms of dialogue with China and that its policy of reducing these issues and increasing understanding and cooperation with Beijing remained “unchanged.”
“At the same time, the government has long believed it is important to promote inbound tourism from various countries and regions, as well as the broad overseas expansion of Japanese content,” she said. “We will continue to steadily advance these efforts.”
More than 40 percent of Japan-bound flights scheduled from China in December had been canceled, China’s state broadcaster reported on Dec. 1, citing an unspecified platform. It added that the number of cancellations had surpassed 1,900.
While the influx of billions of tourists brings substantial economic benefits every year, local residents have complained of disruption to their daily lives. Authorities in popular destinations, such as Okinawa, have been grappling with issues of overtourism, as well as the growing dependence on tourism revenue.
.
Taiwan
Aside from economic measures, the CCP has been working to rally support from foreign nations, such as Russia, France, and the UK, in an effort to isolate Japan in the simmering spat.On Dec. 8, while hosting visiting German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, the CCP’s top diplomat Wang Yi urged Berlin to “understand and support” China’s position on Taiwan, according to a Chinese summary of the meeting.
Wang told Wadephu that Japan—referred to as a “defeated country” in World War II—should “act with great caution,” since this year marked the 80th anniversary of the end of the war, according to a separate statement from his ministry, which focused on Wang’s remarks regarding Taiwan.
Accusing the Japanese prime minister of threatening “the use of force against China,” Wang called her remarks “completely and utterly unacceptable,” the foreign ministry said.
Japan ended its colonial rule over Taiwan in 1945, transferring control to the Chinese nationalist government led by Chiang Kai-shek.
The nationalist government retreated to Taiwan in 1949 after losing the Chinese Civil War to the CCP, which has since started one-party rule on the mainland.
Despite the CCP’s pledges of reunification with Taiwan—and refusals to renounce the use of force to achieve the target—it has never governed the self-ruled democracy.
In Taipei, the Foreign Ministry said on Dec. 9 that no matter how many times the CCP repeated its claims, it would “never become the truth.”


