Taiwan ¡¥should be a
part of security¡¦
REGIONAL DUTY: Taiwan should not be ignored and
excluded from security plans for the Asia-Pacific region, a senior Japanese
politician told the visiting DPP chairman
By Chris Wang / Staff reporter
Japanese Liberal Democratic Party
Senator Nobuo Kishi, Democratic Progressive Party Chairman Su Tseng-chang and
Taiwan¡¦s former representative to Japan Koh Se-kai, left to right, appear at a
breakfast meeting in Tokyo, Japan yesterday.
Photo: Li Hsin-fang, Taipei Times
Taiwan should not be excluded from the
security architecture in the Asia-Pacific region, former Japanese defense
minister and Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Secretary-General Shigeru Ishiba
reportedly told Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Chairman Su Tseng-chang (Ĭs©÷)
during a meeting.
In an interview with Taiwanese media following his breakfast meeting with Su ¡X
who is in Tokyo on a five-day visit ¡X yesterday morning, Nobuo Kishi, an LDP
senator, provided details on Ishiba¡¦s closed-door meeting with Su on Monday, the
DPP said in a press release.
The senator ¡X the brother of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe ¡X said that
Ishiba did not propose to ¡§include Taiwan in the US-Japan Security Treaty,¡¨ but
underlined that policymakers and countries should get to understand Taiwan
better before assessing Asia-Pacific security situations, and Taiwan should not
be ignored or excluded from any security plans.
Tokyo and Washington announced stability across the Taiwan Strait as one of
their ¡§common strategic objectives¡¨ in a bilateral security consultative
committee joint statement. The announcement was interpreted in Taiwan as the
basis of Japan and the US¡¦ involvement if stability in the Taiwan Strait was
threatened.
Kishi said he held similar views to those of Su, who arrived in Tokyo on Sunday
with a 30-member delegation, on his proposal of a ¡§democratic alliance¡¨ that
will include Japan, Taiwan, South Korea and the US.
He added that Japan has always seen Taiwan as an important neighbor, and its
relations with Taiwan as a cornerstone for peace and stability in the
Asia-Pacific region.
In terms of the disputed Diao-yutai Islands (³¨³½¥x), known as the Senkakus in
Japan, Kishi said that while Japan insisted on its territorial claim, it
realized the urgency of a new round of fisheries negotiations with Taiwan, and
hoped that a dialogue on fishing rights and freedom of navigation would begin
soon.
Kishi was among seven LDP senators and Japanese lower house representatives who
met with Su yesterday morning and exchanged views on a wide range of issues,
according to Liu Shih-chung (¼B¥@©¾), director of the DPP¡¦s Department of
International Affairs.
Most of the LDP politicians called for closer exchanges between the two parties,
Liu said.
More than 80 of the 114 new LDP representatives in Japan¡¦s lower house are in
their 40s, suggesting that the party is undergoing a generational change, and it
is important for the two parties to engage closer, Liu quoted LDP house
representative Tsukasa Akimoto as saying.
Akimoto¡¦s views were shared by LDP colleagues, such as Koichi Hagiuda and Yohei
Matsumoto, Liu said.
Matsumoto highlighted Taiwan¡¦s geographic strategic importance for Japan, as the
Taiwan Strait is on the sea route for oil shipments from the Middle East to
Japan, Liu said.
Liu said that the DPP had intensive exchanges with young Japanese politicians
and would strengthen its ties with politicians from all parties, including the
Democratic Party of Japan and the Japan Restoration Party, in the future.
The DPP delegation is scheduled to return to Taipei tomorrow.
|