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Timeline of Japan and China's spat Tokyo, Jan 9 (AFP) Jan 09, 2026 A spat between Tokyo and Beijing following Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's suggestion of Japanese military action if China invaded Taiwan isn't going away. AFP details the timeline of the dispute between Asia's two biggest economies -- whose relations have long been frosty -- as it enters its third month.
The apparently unscripted remarks, in a budget committee meeting in parliament, depart from past premiers' more cautious language. China has long insisted that Taiwan, occupied for decades by Japan until 1945, is its territory and has not ruled out force to achieve "reunification".
The next day Japan calls in the Chinese ambassador over an X post by the Osaka consul general threatening, with apparent reference to Takaichi, to "cut off that dirty neck".
With China last year Japan's biggest source of tourists -- some 8.8 million in the first 11 months -- travel and consumer stocks tumble on the Nikkei.
Beijing then says premier Li Qiang has no plans to meet with Takaichi in a G20 summit in South Africa.
The talks make little progress and images on Chinese state media of Kanai appearing to bow to his counterpart go viral on Chinese social media.
China had only recently resumed purchasing some items after banning them following Japan's release of wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear plant in 2023. The next day Taiwan's Lai is pictured eating sushi and on November 21 Taipei lifts all restrictions on Japanese food imports.
China calls the deployment a "deliberate attempt to create regional tension and provoke military confrontation".
Culture isn't spared. On November 28, Japanese singer Maki Otsuki abandons a performance part-way through the "One Piece" theme song when the music and lights are cut.
On December 9, Russian and Chinese bombers rendezvous in the East China Sea and fly around Japan, Tokyo says. The next day the Japanese and US air forces conduct their own "tactical exercises" involving two US B52 bombers.
Japan says China's sixth set of major manoeuvres in recent years "increase tensions".
The statement fuels worries that Beijing may choke supplies of vital rare earth minerals, some of which are included in China's list of "dual-use" goods. An earlier spat in 2010 saw Japan move to lessen its dependence on Beijing for rare earths but more than 70 percent still come from China, according to Tokyo.
But media reports say that China has begun choking off exports of rare earths, as well as holding up sake and food imports into China. |
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