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Experts: Japan’s excuses for fighters don’t hold water
Japan—Japan’s excuse of
airspace violations for its planned deployment of new F-15 jet fighters
on Okinawa does not hold water and reflects a “Cold War mentality”
against China, say Chinese experts.
Foreign media have reported that a Japanese defense ministry spokeswoman
said on Tuesday that the country plans to send 20 F-15 jets to Okinawa
by the end of March 2009, the first time for the fighters to be deployed
on the southwestern island.
The plan, designed to enhance defense capabilities in southwestern
Japan, also includes the deployment of an Apache fighter helicopter on
the island of Kyushu, according to the spokeswoman. Japan is upgrading
jet fighters “as a measure aimed at airspace violations”, she was quoted
as saying. “We can hardly not think of the move as targeted at China,
given the geographic proximity of Okinawa and China,” said Shen Shishun,
a researcher with the China Institute of International Studies (CIIS).
“The excuse of ‘airspace violations’ sounds pale. It is unimaginable in
our view,” said Shen. “It’s sheer Cold War mentality. Japan is
over-reacting to China’s rapid development and its growing international
influence, and tends to mark out China because of our differences on
ideology,” Shen added.
During the Cold War, Japan’s defense policy focused on Hokkaido, seen as
possibly vulnerable from the Soviet Union, while in recent years its
defense forces have gradually moved to the southwestern coast. Over the
past two years, the “China threat” theory has showed up in Japanese
defense white papers. The number of emergency alerts caused by alleged
Chinese incursions into Japanese airspace has also increased sharply,
Japanese media has claimed. Despite the present warming ties between
China and Japan, the hardline mentality of Japan’s defense policy is
unlikely to fundamentally change, according to Zheng Donghui, another
researcher with CIIS.—Xinhua |