US position on Japan island control a 'betrayal': China
BEIJING - Veiled US warnings to Beijing not to challenge
Japan's control of disputed islands encouraged Tokyo's "dangerously
right-leaning" government and "betrayed" Washington's vow of
neutrality, Chinese state media said Saturday.
The comments came as Japan's coastguard said three Chinese
government ships had entered Japanese territorial waters around the islands,
known as the Senkaku in Japanese and the Diaoyu in Chinese.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday said the
area around the islands in the East China Sea was under Japan's control and
therefore protected under a US security treaty with Tokyo.
Speaking at a joint news conference with Japanese Foreign
Minister Fumio Kishida in Washington, and without mentioning Beijing directly,
she said the US opposed "any unilateral actions" to undermine
Japanese authority over the islands.
But in a commentary piece, the official Chinese news agency
Xinhua criticised Washington's position, saying it "cast doubts on (US)
credibility as a responsible power in the region".
It was "unwise" for Washington "to throw
support behind Japan in Tokyo's islands dispute with Beijing", Xinhua
said, adding: "This unbalanced position has betrayed its declared
intention to stay neutral on the issue."
The US proposal for "tighter military alliance with
Japan will only encourage Tokyo's dangerously right-leaning tendency",
Xinhua said.
Three Chinese government surveillance vessels sailed in
waters around the disputed islands Saturday for nearly five hours but had all
left Japanese waters by 1:52 pm (0452 GMT), the Japan coastguard said.
China has repeatedly sailed into the waters since Japan
nationalised the chain in September, a move that triggered anger and
demonstrations in China.
The United States insists it is neutral on the ultimate
sovereignty of the islands.
"We want to see China and Japan resolve this matter
peacefully through dialogue," Clinton said Friday.
"We do not want to see any action taken by anyone that
could raise tensions or result in miscalculation that would undermine the
peace, security and economic growth in this region."
China has persistently criticised the US position and the
sending of maritime surveillance ships to the potentially gas-rich area is seen
by experts as a way to contest the notion that Japan holds effective control.
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