
Threatened by Trump tariffs, Japan walks a delicate tightrope between US and China
US president Donald Trump, left, with Chinese president Xi Jinping (Image credits: AP)
WASHINGTON: Just as
Japan
's top trade negotiator traveled to Washington for another round of tariff talks last week, a bipartisan delegation bearing the name of "Japan-China Friendship" wrapped up a visit to Beijing.
A week earlier, the head of the junior party in Japan's ruling coalition was in Beijing delivering a letter from Japanese prime minister
Shigeru Ishiba
addressed to Chinese president
Xi Jinping
. Details of the letter are unknown, but the two sides discussed US tariffs in addition to bilateral issues.
Among all US allies being wooed by Beijing in its tariff stare-down with Washington, Japan stands out.
It is a peculiar case not only for its staunch commitment to its alliance with the United States but also for its complicated and uneasy history with the neighboring Asian giant, particularly the war history from the 20th century that still casts a shadow over the politics of today.
"On one hand, they are neighbors and they are important economic partners. There's a lot that connects Japan and China," said Matthew Goodman, director of the Greenberg Center for Geoeconomics at the council on foreign relations. "But on the other hand, I think there are limits to how far they're going to lean into China."
While Japan won't walk away from its alliance with the United States, the linchpin of the Asian country's diplomacy and security policies, "it's also true that the tariffs and uncertainty that Trump has created for Japan is really shaking things up in Tokyo," Goodman said.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
People Aged 50-85 With No Life Insurance Could Get This
Reassured
Get Quote
Undo
Last month, President Donald Trump announced a 24 per cent tariff on Japanese goods in a sweeping plan to levy duties on about 90 countries. The White House has since paused the tariffs but a 10 per cent baseline duty on all countries except China, allowing time for negotiations. Still, Trump's 25 per cent tax on aluminum, steel and auto exports have gone into effect for Japan.
The tariff moves, as well as Trump's "America First" agenda, have cast doubts among the Japanese if the United States is still a dependable ally, while China is rallying support from tariff-threatened countries - including Japan.
In Beijing, Japan sees positive signs When Tetsuo Saito led Japan's Komeito Party delegation to Beijing in late April, China hinted at difficulty in its tariff dispute with the United States, signaling its willingness to improve ties with Tokyo. An unnamed senior Chinese official said his country was "in trouble" when discussing Trump's 145 per cent tariff on Chinese products, according to Japanese reports.
Saito's visit was soon followed by that of the bipartisan delegation of Japan-China Friendship Parliamentarians' Union.
Zhao Leji
, Beijing's top legislator, told the delegation that China's National People's Congress would be "willing to carry out various forms of dialogue and exchanges."
Beijing did not lift a ban on Japan's seafood imports as the Japanese delegates hoped, but it signaled positive signs on its assessment of the safety of the discharges of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Beijing banned Japan's seafood products in 2023, citing those concerns.
Ties between Tokyo and Beijing have long been rocky. In the past several years, they squabbled not only over the seafood ban but also long-standing territorial disputes over the Senkaku, or Diaoyu, islands in the East China Sea, Beijing's growing military assertiveness and violence against Japanese nationals in China, an issue complicated by the nations' uneasy history.
Tokyo's closer ties with Washington during Joe Biden's presidency also upset Beijing, which saw it as part of the US strategy to contain China and has lectured Tokyo to "face squarely and reflect on the history of aggression."
An imperial power in Asia for centuries, China fell behind Japan in the 19th century when Japan began to embrace Western industrialization and grew into a formidable economic and military power.
It invaded China in the 1930s and controlled the northeastern territory known as Manchuria. War atrocities, including the Nanking Massacre and the use of chemical and biological weapons and human medical experiments in Manchuria, have left deep scars in China.
They have yet to be healed, though Japan's conservative politicians today still attempt to deny the aggression.
Ishiba, elected Japan's prime minister in October, has a more neutral view on his country's wartime history than the late prime minister
Shinzo Abe
and his two successors.
Weeks after taking office, Ishiba held talks with Xi on the sidelines of a leaders' summit.
Chinese scholars, however, see Tokyo's recent engagements with Beijing as a pragmatic move to hedge against US protectionism and not a long-term strategy for stability with China.
The odds are low for Japan to move into China's orbit, Goodman said. "They have for a long time had to manage an important but challenging relationship with China," he said.
"And that is, again, a long-standing problem for Japan, going back centuries or millennia."
Seeking tariff deals and stable ties in the US While Japan might welcome the friendlier tone from Beijing, it is trying to stabilize Japan-US relations under Trump's "America First" agenda, and it is hoping to settle the tariff dispute without confronting Washington, with an eye on preventing Beijing from exploiting any fallout in Japan-US relations.
Japan was among the first countries to hold tariff talks with Washington. During the first round in mid-April, Trump inserted himself into the discussions, a sign of the high stakes for the United States to reach a deal with Japan. The Trump administration reportedly pushed for Japan to buy more US-made cars and open its market to US beef, rice and potatoes.
After the second round of negotiation in Washington last week,
Ryosei Akazawa
, the country's chief tariff negotiator, said he pushed Japan's request that the US drop tariffs and was continuing efforts toward an agreement acceptable to both sides.
He said Japan's auto industry was already hurting from the 25 per cent tariff and that he needed to be "thorough but fast."
Asked about China, Akazawa said only that his country keeps watching the US-China tariff development "with great interest." He noted Japan's deep trade ties with China.
Competing in Southeast Asia While China and Japan are working to mend ties, the two are also competing in the Southeast Asia region, where Trump has threatened high tariffs as well.
The region is deeply integrated into China's supply chain but under pressure from the West to diversify and reduce its reliance on China. With younger and growing populations as compared to East Asia, the region is considered an important growth center.
Japan, as a major postwar development aid contributor, has gradually regained trust in the region, which also was scarred by Japan's World War II past.
On Wednesday, Ishiba returned from Vietnam and the Philippines after agreeing with their leaders to further strengthen security and economic ties.
During the visit, Ishiba stressed Japan's commitment to maintaining and strengthening a multilateral free-trade system in each country. Ishiba also had telephone talks with his Malaysian and Singaporean counterparts earlier this month about US tariffs.
Just weeks earlier, Xi was in Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia, also stressing free trade and seeking stronger supply chains.
At a recent discussion at the Washington-based think tank Hudson Institute, Itsunori Onodera, Japan's governing party policy chief, warned of "very unstable" feelings among many Asian countries faced with high tariffs from the United States.
"There's a danger they might become more distant and become closer to China," Onodera said. "This is not something that Japan wants, either."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
32 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Quad Leaders Summit likely to be held in November
The Quad Leaders Summit is expected to be held in November, with the four members of the grouping now focused on giving shape to an agenda to bolster economic security and maritime security, people familiar with the matter said. The Quad Leaders Summit, which will be hosted by India this year, was earlier expected to be held in September but scheduling and logistical issues have resulted in plans to hold the meet later in the year, the people familiar with planning for the meeting said on condition of anonymity. However, dates are yet to be finalised for the summit, they said. Some Quad members believed September wouldn't be ideal for holding the summit because the focus would be on the UN General Assembly in New York, and the people pointed out that Japan is set to hold elections for the upper chamber of the Diet or the Parliament in July, leaving little time for preparations for a summit. The summit will be preceded by a meeting of the foreign ministers of India, Australia, Japan and the US - the four members of Quad - that is set to be hosted by Washington either in late June or early July, the people said. As preparations have progressed for the summit, the four members of Quad have felt the need to make the agenda more focused so that the grouping can come up with concrete deliverables, the people said. 'There was a feeling that the Quad had spread itself too thin by taking on too many things. There is a need for a more focused agenda,' one of the people said. The focus in shaping the agenda for the Quad Leaders Summit will be on infrastructure and technology, which both dovetail into creating economic security, maritime security and maritime domain awareness, and disaster response, a second person said. The people also said some aspects of shaping the agenda were influenced by the imperatives of the Donald Trump administration in the US. 'The cancer moonshot, which was conceived at the behest of the Biden administration, doesn't appear to be a priority at the moment,' the second person said. The Quad Cancer Moonshot, a global offshoot of a US initiative, focused on reducing the burden of cancer in the Indo-Pacific region, starting with cervical cancer. 'The Quad partners are giving shape to efforts to offer technology and funding for infrastructure across the Indo-Pacific so that smaller countries in the region have more options,' a third person said. The four members of Quad have already done considerable work to bolster the Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness (IPMDA), which was launched in 2022 to combat illegal fishing and counter 'dark shipping'. Last year, the Quad agreed to expand this initiative to the Indian Ocean through the Indian Navy's Information Fusion Centre in Gurugram. The initiative aims to improve real-time maritime monitoring, particularly the identifying and tracking of suspicious or unlawful activities such as 'dark shipping', whereby ships switch off their tracking systems. In addition to the maritime domain awareness initiative, the Quad recently launched the Indo-Pacific Logistics Network (IPLN), which enables the grouping to leverage shared logistics capabilities in the Indo-Pacific to support the response to natural disasters. The people said IPMDA and IPLN reflect the Quad's commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific and highlight practical cooperation to address regional challenges. Counter-terrorism too is expected to figure in both the upcoming meeting of Quad foreign ministers and the summit, and India will expect support from the other members of the grouping for its new approach to counter cross-border terrorism backed by Pakistan, the people said.


Time of India
37 minutes ago
- Time of India
'No compromise with safety standards on helicopter service providers': Uttarakhand CM Dhami
Uttarakhand chief minister Pushkar Singh Dhami (ANI) DEHRADUN: Uttarakhand chief minister Pushkar Singh Dhami has made it clear in strong words to all the helicopter service providers and operators serving in the state here that there should be no compromise with the safety standards of helicopter services, said an official statement. CM said that safety standards should be given top priority without getting complacent with the maximum number of passengers taking heli services. Along with this, the chief minister has also given instructions for audit and continuous review of heli accidents that have happened in the past years so that they do not recur. He said that as the nodal of the state, the safety of the passengers is our biggest responsibility. CM Dhami has given strict instructions to strictly follow the regular fitness check of the helicopter, make a solid and effective SOP for helicopter ticket booking and strictly follow the safety standards of the engine of the helicopter running in the high Himalayan regions. CM Dhami was reviewing the heli services of the state with all the helicopter service providers and operators, UCADA, AAIB and DGCA providing their services in Uttarakhand at the chief minister's residence. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Free Solitaire. No Ads Ever. Play Solitaire Download Undo In view of the obstacles in heli services due to weather, accurate weather information and safety, chief minister Dhami has directed to installation of weather cameras in Kedar Valley as well as all other Chardham Valleys. He has also directed UCADA to prepare a concrete policy to operate only double-engine helicopters in future. The chief minister has also directed UCADA and related stakeholders to study the heli service model being operated in Vaishno Devi. He has instructed to keep only highly experienced pilots in heli services in the state. Along with this, chief minister Dhami has also given strict advice to the heli operators to maintain sensitive behaviour with the passengers so that the tourists coming from all over the world have a pleasant experience in Devbhoomi. He has also directed the heli operators and the administration to run a cleanliness campaign on the Chardham routes. The chief minister said that in view of the increasing demand for heli services in future, many helipads are under construction in the state. So far this year, more than 66,000 passengers have availed the facility of heli shuttle services. chief minister Pushkar Singh Dhami has also directed UCADA to prepare an action plan for heli services for the state for the next 10 years in today's meeting. He said that being a tourism and Chardham state, the demand for heli services is going to increase more and more in the state. Due to the adverse geographical conditions, heli services will be the basis of the state in future.


Time of India
38 minutes ago
- Time of India
Japan says Chinese jets made dangerously close approach
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Tokyo said Thursday it had expressed "serious concerns" to Beijing after Chinese fighter jets flew dangerously close to a Japanese military patrol plane in the Pacific last incident followed the sighting of two Chinese aircraft carriers sailing in the Pacific together for the first time, including in Japan's economic said this week that the aircraft carriers' activity -- described by China as "routine training" -- showed the expanding geographic scope of Beijing's military.A Japanese defence ministry spokesman told AFP on Thursday that Chinese fighter jets had flown "unusually close" to the Japanese patrol Saturday, a Chinese J-15 fighter jet from the Shandong aircraft carrier followed a Japanese P-3C patrol plane for 40 minutes, then on Sunday two J-15 jets did the same for 80 minutes, the spokesman said."During these long periods, the jets flew unusually close to the P-3C, and they flew within 45 metres" of the patrol plane at the same altitude on both days, he Sunday, the Chinese jets cut across airspace around 900 metres in front of the Japanese patrol plane -- a distance that a P-3C can reach within a few seconds at cruising speed, the spokesman added."Such abnormal approaches can lead to an accidental collision, so we have expressed serious concerns" to the Chinese side and asked them to prevent a repetition, a defence ministry statement said no Japanese military personnel had been injured.A second defence ministry spokesman told AFP the Japanese message was delivered through diplomatic channels and between officials from the neighbours' defence ministries.A similar incident was last reported over a decade ago in May and June 2014, when Chinese Su-27 fighter jets flew within 30 metres (100 feet) of Japan's military Kawai, director of the University of Tokyo's economic security and policy innovation program, told AFP earlier this week that the timing of the aircraft carrier movements could be linked to US-China economic tensions."Beijing calculated that the United States would be less willing or able to respond militarily at this precise moment, seeing it as an opportune time to demonstrate its expanding military capabilities," he said.