China Criticizes Japan for Military Radar Plans
China criticized Japan for its plans to install a
cutting-edge U.S. military radar system to monitor North Korean missile
launches, saying that could impact regional stability and upset the strategic balance.
The X-band radar system would boost Japan's ability to track and intercept
missiles from across the Sea of Japan. That was "not conducive to regional
nuclear non-proliferation and stability, and will cause an extremely negative
impact on the global strategic balance," Chinese Foreign Ministryspokesman Hong Lei said. The comments came after the governor of Japan's Kyoto
region, where the radar will be based, endorsed it last week. The facility will
be staffed by as many as 160 U.S. service members and civilian contractors. The
issue also comes amid ongoing tensions between Tokyo and Beijing over an East
China Sea territorial dispute. Beijing has issued months of angry rhetoric and
frozen high-level contacts with Japan following Tokyo's nationalization last
year of tiny islands claimed by China. Patrol boats from both sides regularly
confront each other in the waters surrounding the uninhabited archipelago. China
also is highly critical of the U.S.-Japan military alliance along with Tokyo's
moves to upgrade its armed forces, saying they are steps toward a revival of
the strain of militarism that led to Japan's brutal invasion and occupation of
China in the 1930s and 1940s.
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