Pro-China stance
risks Japan ties: Koh
By Chris Wang / Staff reporter
Former Taiwanese representative
to Japan Koh Se-kai, right, yesterday speaks with former Democratic Progressive
Party chairperson Tsai Ing-wen during the launch of his new book in Taipei.
Photo: CNA
The man likely to become the new prime
minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe, could turn out to be Taiwan’s biggest enemy if
Taipei chooses to maintain the pro-China stance it has adopted under President
Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) administration, former representative to Japan Koh Se-kai
(許世楷) said yesterday.
Known for his friendliness toward Taiwan, Abe has also been aware of Taipei’s
gradual tilting toward Beijing, which poses a strategic threat to Japan, Koh
said at the launch of his new book yesterday.
“Abe is one of Taiwan’s most trustworthy Japanese allies. However, I’d say the
length of that friendship will be determined by which path Taiwan chooses to
walk on: the pro-China path or the pro-US-Japan one,” said Koh, who served as
Taiwan’s top diplomat to Japan between 2004 and 2008.
The solid relationship between Japan and Taiwan that Koh established during his
diplomatic career has started to crack under Ma’s pro-China administration, as
evidenced by Japan’s initiative to expand its air defense identification zone (ADIZ)
on Yonaguni Island, Japan’s westernmost island about 110km from Hualien County.
Koh said that Japan has proposed expanding its ADIZ to include the western half
of the island, which has been under the jurisdiction of Taiwan’s ADIZ, twice in
June 2010 and this year, a move which suggested that Tokyo is concerns about
Taipei’s strategic stance.
The Taiwan Relations Act, which the US Congress passed in 1979, and the US-Japan
Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security are two of the most important legal
documents for Taiwan in terms of security, he said, adding that the Ma
administration should be cautious in choosing which partnership would best serve
the nation’s interests.
Commenting on the challenges Abe would face if he becomes prime minister, Koh
said that Abe will have to reinvigorate Japan’s slow economy, resolve the
escalating dispute over the country’s use of nuclear power as well as make a
decision on whether to raise the consumption tax, a policy championed by the
previous administration.
However, the potential policy which is being watched most attentively by
international and domestic observers is Abe’s wish to amend the Japanese
constitution, in particular Article 9, which is a pacifist clause that renounces
war and the use of force, Koh said.
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