With relations between the two Asian powers at a low point, China decided to go ahead with a scaled-back reception here on Thursday night to honor the 40th anniversary of the resumption of their diplomatic ties on Sept. 29, 1972. A member of the Politburo’s Standing Committee, Jia Qinglin, attended with several other Chinese officials.
But Beijing sent a not-so-subtle message to Tokyo by
not granting clearance to the plane that would have brought in an important
Japanese guest, the chairman of Toyota. Other Japanese attended the event,
though, and at the United Nations in New York, the two sides met in private and
sparred in public.
Around the disputed islands in the East China Sea,
called the Diaoyu by the Chinese and the Senkaku by the Japanese, a large
flotilla of Chinese patrol boats was being monitored Friday by about half of Japan’s fleet of coast guard
cutters, the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun reported.
The protests in more than 80 cities, including in urban
centers where Japanese car dealerships and electronics plants were damaged,
suggested that the Chinese leadership approved the outpouring of nationalism in
part as insulation against criticism of the party itself during the transition
of power that formally is scheduled to take place at the 18th Communist Party
Congress, now set to begin on Nov. 8. But the protests threatened to turn
against the Chinese government itself, diplomats and analysts said.
Even though China has overtaken Japan as the biggest
economy in Asia, Beijing’s handling of the dispute, precipitated by the
Japanese government’s decision to buy three of the islands from their private
Japanese owners, highlighted the interdependence of the Chinese and Japanese
economies, and the limitations on what the leadership could allow.
Notions of punishing Tokyo economically for buying the
islands, whose status was left unclear after World War II, are unrealistic,
said Hu Shuli, editor in chief of Caixin Media and one of China’s chief
economic journalists. So many Chinese workers are employed at Japanese-owned
companies, she said, that any escalation of tensions leading to a boycott of
Japanese goods could lead to huge job losses.
This would be disastrous in an already shaky Chinese
economy, Ms. Hu wrote in the Chinese magazine Century Weekly.
At a time when overall foreign investment in China is
shrinking, Japan’s investment in China rose by 16 percent last year, Ms. Hu
noted. The Japan External Trade Organization reported $12.6 billion of Japanese
investment in China last year, compared with $14.7 billion in the United States.
Not just China, but all of Asia, could face a serious
economic downturn if Japanese investments in China were threatened, said Piao
Guangji, a researcher at the China Academy of Social Sciences.
Exactly how the anti-Japanese protests were organized,
and by whom, remained murky.
A rough chronology showed that immediately after the
Japanese government announced it had bought the islands, protests began in
Beijing and other cities. The protests then spread, reaching a peak on the
anniversary of the Sept. 18, 1931, Mukden
Incident, which led to the Japanese invasion of Manchuria. After that, the
protests were shut down.
It appeared that permission for the weeklong protests
had been discussed at very high levels, said one foreign diplomat who had
followed the events closely.
Analysts said the protests might have been used as a
weapon by one party faction against another as part of the internal
machinations over who would win positions on the Standing Committee, but
precisely how those possibilities played out, if at all, was not clear.
Bold color photographs on the front pages of state-run
newspapers, particularly of the protests outside the Japanese Embassy in
Beijing, were evidence that senior leaders approved of the demonstrations, and
suggested that, in some respects, they were even organized by the government,
diplomats said.
Photographs of protests are rarely seen in the
state-run news media, they noted. By running them, the government sent a
message to the Chinese people that joining the demonstrations was acceptable,
said a foreign diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with
protocol.
Municipal workers in Beijing who normally guard local
neighborhoods were called by their superiors at 4 a.m. on the day of one of the
protests, directed to board buses that took them to the protest site outside
the Japanese Embassy and provided with box lunches, one of the workers said.
Their job was to provide security, alongside the police.
As the demonstrations grew in intensity, there were
increasing signs that they might get out of control. Several protesters in
Beijing carried signs saying “Diaoyu belongs to China, Bo belongs to the
people.” That was a reference to Bo Xilai, the disgraced former Communist Party
boss of the western city of Chongqing, who had developed a populist following
before he fell from power this year after his wife was accused of murdering a
British business associate.
Those signs were quietly removed from the hands of the
protesters by plainclothes security men stationed around the crowd, said a
person who watched one of the protests outside the Japanese Embassy.
A few placards bearing portraits of the late Chinese
leader Mao Zedong stood out among the Chinese flags carried by most of the
demonstrators. A protester in the southern city of Shenzhen was heard on
television shouting, “Down with Communism!”
The end of the protests, however, did not mean the end
of the fury against Japan.
At a meeting in Beijing this month, Western academics
were taken aback by the depth of hostility toward Japan among Chinese foreign
policy experts.
There was talk of “conflict” to teach Japan a lesson,
said John DeLury, an assistant professor at Yonsei University Graduate School
of International Studies in Seoul, for making what the Chinese see as an
unacceptable grab of territory that historically has belonged to them.
With the new leadership in Beijing set to assume full
control soon, even as Japan may turn to a conservative Liberal Democratic
government under the more hawkish Shinzo Abe in elections next year, a
reduction in tensions looks remote, said Ren Xiao, a former Chinese diplomat
who served at the Chinese Embassy in Tokyo.
“I think it will be less likely for the new Chinese
leadership to make concessions,” said Mr. Ren, now a professor of international
politics at Fudan University in Shanghai. “The same goes for a possible Liberal
Democratic Party government in Japan. That’s why I am very worried about the
Sino-Japanese relationship.”
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