By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Why China urges citizens not to
visit Japan
China has warned its
citizens against traveling to Japan as it escalates a backlash over comments by
the country’s prime minister about the island of Taiwan.
The dictum is
Beijing’s most substantive retaliation yet to Sanae Takaichi’s remarks. Even as
it may be more symbolic than anything, the move suggests Beijing is willing to
wield its economic heft to press geopolitical points, a well-worn playbook.
Recent “blatantly
provocative remarks on Taiwan” have “further damaged the atmosphere for
people-to-people exchanges… creating additional risks to the safety and
security of Chinese citizens in Japan,” a statement published by the Chinese
Foreign Ministry said Friday.
The ministry and its
missions “remind Chinese citizens to refrain from visiting Japan for the time
being,” it said.
The move is Beijing’s
latest show of outrage in a roughly week-long row after Takaichi, in
response to a question in Japan’s parliament, said that a Chinese attack on Taiwan would count as “a situation
threatening Japan’s survival,” and thus could trigger a military response from
Tokyo.
Beijing views the
self-governing democracy of Taiwan as its territory and has vowed to take
control of the island by force if necessary. For Beijing, Taiwan’s sovereignty
is the most sensitive issue in its relations with other nations – a “red line”
not to be crossed.
China’s Ministry of
Defense on Friday separately warned that Japan would “suffer a crushing defeat”
if it dared to intervene militarily in the Taiwan Strait.
Nearly 7.5 million
travelers from China visited Japan between January and September this year, by
far the highest count of any country or region, according to official data
cited by Japanese public broadcaster NHK.
The travel advisory
follows official protest from both sides related to the incident, with each
country summoning the other’s ambassador, and a surge of vitriolic backlash
against Takaichi from within China, where nationalist, anti-Japanese sentiment
has been on the rise in recent years.
The falling-out comes
less than two weeks after Takaichi and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met for the
first time on the sidelines of an international summit and agreed to pursue
constructive, stable ties.

The move is Beijing’s
latest show of outrage in a roughly week-long row after Takaichi, in
response to a question in Japan’s parliament, said that a Chinese attack on
Taiwan would count as “a situation threatening Japan’s survival,” and thus could
trigger a military response from Tokyo.
Beijing views the
self-governing democracy of Taiwan as its territory
and has vowed to take control of the island by force if necessary. For Beijing,
Taiwan’s sovereignty is the most sensitive issue in its relations with other
nations – a “red line” not to be crossed.
China’s Ministry of
Defense on Friday separately warned that Japan would “suffer a crushing defeat”
if it dared to intervene militarily in the
Taiwan Strait.
Nearly 7.5 million
travelers from China visited Japan between January and September this year, by
far the highest count of any country or region, according to official data
cited by Japanese public broadcaster NHK.
The travel advisory
follows official protest from both sides related to the incident, with each
country summoning the other’s ambassador, and a surge of vitriolic backlash
against Takaichi from within China, where nationalist, anti-Japanese sentiment
has been on the rise in recent years.
The falling-out comes
less than two weeks after Takaichi and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met for the
first time on the sidelines of an international summit and agreed to pursue
constructive, stable ties.
‘A heavy price’
The backlash was
kicked off by China’s Consul General in Osaka Xue Jian, who last Saturday
shared a news article about Takaichi’s remarks and commented, “the dirty neck
that sticks itself in must be cut off,” in a post on X that has since been
deleted.
State media have
since published a barrage of scathing commentaries and editorials, while
rampant social media discussion has disparaged Takaichi, Japan’s first woman
prime minister.
A commentary from the
People’s Liberation Army Daily, published Saturday, Nov. 15, attacked Takaichi
and said if Taiwan intervened militarily in the Taiwan Strait, China would give
Japan a “head-on blow.” A PLA-affiliated X account also circulated comments
translated into Japanese warning Japan would “pay a heavy price” in such a
case.
Tokyo on Friday
summoned China’s ambassador to Japan to protest Xue’s “highly inappropriate
remarks” and demand Beijing take “appropriate actions,” its foreign ministry
said.
Beijing had summoned
Japan’s ambassador to China in a meeting where Chinese Vice Foreign Minister
Sun Weidong said Takaichi’s comments had “seriously damaged the political
foundation of China-Japan relations,” and slammed Japan for not retracting
them.
Japan’s Foreign
Minister Toshimitsu Motegi on Friday said there was no need to retract
Takaichi’s comments, stressing that they were made within the context of a
discussion on an “existential crisis.”
Separately, on
Friday, November 14, Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara said, “peace and
stability in the Taiwan Strait are important not only for Japan’s security but
also for the stability of the international community.”
On Monday, Takaichi
said her remarks were “hypothetical” and that she would refrain from making
similar comments in parliament again.
Previous Japanese
leaders have avoided discussing Taiwan in the context of a military response.
And Washington deliberately remains vague on how it would respond to a
hypothetical invasion, a policy known as “strategic ambiguity.”
Beijing, which is
widely seen as aiming to establish itself as the dominant power in the region,
looks warily at the American alliance with Japan when it comes to its own
regional security and ambitions.
Takaichi has called
for closer security ties with the US and last month moved to accelerate the
country’s defense build-up, but like previous Japanese prime ministers, she
must balance the country’s close economic ties to China.
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