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Japan hits back over Beijing and Seoul WWII proposal
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 04, 2014


Chinese, Indian militaries vow cooperation: Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) July 04, 2014 - Top Chinese and Indian military officials vowed to boost cooperation between the Asian giants during a rare visit by the head of India's army, state media reported.

General Bikram Singh, the first Indian army chief to visit China since 2005, held talks Thursday with Fan Changlong, the vice chairman of China's Central Military Commission, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

Relations between the rising powers are generally positive but have suffered from lingering distrust over an unresolved border dispute and a brief war a half century ago.

The frontier issue flared up again in April last year with New Delhi accusing Chinese troops of intruding nearly 20 kilometres (12 miles) into Indian-claimed territory, triggering a three-week standoff that was resolved when forces from both sides pulled back.

"Our common interests far outweigh our differences," Fan told Singh. "Both countries have sufficient wisdom and capability to deal with historical problems."

Singh stressed that the two countries were not rivals, the report said, and military communication and interaction were important to make sure the border areas were peaceful.

Xinhua said that Singh's visit, following India's new Prime Minister Narendra Modi taking office in May, "is regarded as a positive signal from India to interact with China's political and military leaders".

China's willingness to stress cooperation with India over their dispute contrasts with the harder line Beijing has taken in maritime disputes in the South China Sea with the Philippines and Vietnam and the East China Sea with Japan.

China and India are both members of the BRICS grouping, along with Brazil, Russia and South Africa, and Singh's four-day visit follows one last week by Indian Vice President Mohammad Hamid Ansari.

Singh also met Fang Fenghui, chief of general staff of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, Xinhua said.

Fang said the two sides should expand cooperation in areas including joint exercises, peacekeeping and anti-terrorism, the report said.

"Both sides should strengthen border control to prevent disruptions to the broader military-to-military relationship and bilateral ties," Fang said.

Japan on Friday hit back at China and South Korea, calling suggestions that they could jointly mark Tokyo's wartime wrongs "utterly unhelpful", as tensions over history shift alliances in East Asia.

The comments came after Chinese President Xi Jinping and his South Korean opposite number Park Geun-Hye, during summit talks on Thursday, reportedly discussed joining forces for the 70th anniversary next year of Japan's defeat in World War II.

At a regular press conference in Tokyo, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said such moves were divisive.

"Any attempt by China and South Korea to coordinate in picking apart past history unnecessarily and making it an international issue is utterly unhelpful for building peace and cooperation in the region," he told reporters.

Both countries were the object of Japan's imperialist aggression in the 20th century and China's state-run Xinhua news agency cited Xi as saying Beijing and Seoul could "jointly hold memorial activities".

"Japan believes that such issues should not be treated as diplomatic issues," Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters in Tokyo after suggestions Beijing and Seoul could also co-ordinate research into wartime sex slavery.

Around 200,000 women, mainly from Korea but also from China, Taiwan and Indonesia among others, were forced to work in brothels as "comfort women", serving imperial troops as Japan stomped across Asia before and during World War II.

While mainstream Japanese opinion holds that the wartime government was culpable, a small but vocal tranche of the political right -- including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe -- continues to cast doubt, claiming the brothels were staffed by professional prostitutes.

This equivocation irritates Seoul, which sees it as symptom of Japan's lack of penitence.

The China-South Korean summit came after Beijing began publishing what it said were the "confessions" of 45 convicted Japanese war criminals.

China regularly accuses Japan of failing to face up to its history of aggression in Asia, criticism that has intensified under Abe, who won elections in December 2012 and has advocated a more muscular defence and foreign policy stance.

China and South Korea were outraged in December last year when Abe paid homage at Tokyo's Yasukuni Shrine, which honours Japan's war dead including several high-level officials executed for war crimes after World War II.

Both countries have also expressed disquiet over Japan's decision this week to expand the scope of its military, allowing for the first time troops to fight on behalf of an ally under attack.

South Korea and Japan are the two key US military allies in the region, and some observers have pointed to the possibility that Beijing is keen to exploit a rift between them to help counter US President Barack Obama's strategic "pivot" to Asia.

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China to release daily Japanese war crimes 'confession'
Beijing (AFP) July 03, 2014
China began publishing "confessions" of 45 convicted Japanese World War II criminals on Thursday, officials said, in Beijing's latest effort to highlight the past amid a territorial dispute between the two countries. The documents, handwritten by Japanese tried and convicted by military courts in China after the war, are being released online one a day for 45 days by the State Archives Admin ... read more


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