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China urges Japan to just say no to hosting American missiles

  • Beijing issues stern response to reports Washington is planning to position intermediate-range missiles in Asian countries
  • ‘Don’t fall victim to a US geopolitical plot,’ defence ministry spokesman says

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China is concerned about reports that the US might position missiles in Asian countries. Photo: AFP
China has urged Japan to resist striking a deal with the United States to host American intermediate-range missiles on its soil and instead maintain its defence-oriented policy.
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Beijing said on Wednesday it would not sit idly by if the US sought to deploy such missiles on its doorstep, but rather would take “all necessary countermeasures”.

“In the meantime, China hopes Japan and other countries can take regional peace and stability into consideration, act prudently and say no to the US – which wants to deploy intermediate-range missiles on their land – so they don’t fall victim to a US geopolitical plot in the region,” defence ministry spokesman Wu Qian told a press conference.

In a separate press briefing, China’s foreign ministry urged Japan to maintain its “exclusively defence-oriented” policy as laid out in its constitution.

“Because of historical reasons, Japan’s military security trends have always received the attention of the international community and its Asian neighbours. We urge Japan to earnestly learn the lessons of history,” ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said. Tokyo should “continue to follow the path of peaceful development with concrete actions”, he said

Relations between China and Japan would collapse if such missiles were deployed on Japanese soil
Lian Degui, Shanghai International Studies University

Beijing’s comments came in response to reports the US is considering deploying intermediate-range missiles in Asia after withdrawing from the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty in August.

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Under the Cold War-era arms control pact, signatories agree not to “possess, produce or flight-test” ground-launched cruise missiles that have a range of 500-5,500km (310-3,400 miles).

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