Illustration depicting Japan's diplomatic protest against China's ban on dual-use goods exports amid Taiwan tensions.
Illustration depicting Japan's diplomatic protest against China's ban on dual-use goods exports amid Taiwan tensions.
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Japan urges China to lift dual-use goods export ban over Taiwan remarks

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China's commerce ministry announced on January 7 an immediate ban on exports of dual-use goods to Japan. Japan's foreign ministry protested the move as 'extremely regrettable' and demanded its withdrawal. The measure appears to be retaliation for remarks on Taiwan by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.

China announced on January 6 an immediate ban on exports of dual-use items to Japan that can be used for military purposes. The move stems from an early November remark by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, who described a potential Chinese attack on Taiwan as an existential threat to Japan. Beijing views Taiwan as its territory and labeled the comment provocative.

Masaaki Kanai, director general of Japan's Foreign Ministry's Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau, lodged a protest with Shi Yong, deputy chief of mission at the Chinese Embassy in Tokyo, on the same day. Kanai called the measure 'extremely regrettable' and 'cannot be accepted,' noting it targets only Japan and 'deviates significantly from international practice.' Japan's ministry described it as 'absolutely unacceptable and deeply regrettable.'

Dual-use items include goods, software, and technologies with civilian and military applications, such as semiconductors and rare earth elements essential for drones and chips. China's export control list covers about 1,100 items, including at least seven categories of medium and heavy rare earths like samarium, gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, and lutetium. Despite diversification efforts, China supplies around 60% of Japan's rare earth imports, according to Capital Economics.

The ban applies to military users or any purposes contributing to Japan's military strength, with violators facing legal liability. A Japanese government source called it 'symbolic,' suggesting it aims to stoke domestic criticism of Takaichi. Over a decade ago, China restricted rare earth exports to Japan during a dispute. Recent data shows no decline; November exports to Japan rose 35% to 305 metric tons.

Bilateral ties have worsened amid Japan's late December approval of a record 9 trillion yen ($58 billion) military budget, up 3.8%. China's foreign ministry questioned Japan's Taiwan motives as a pretext for military buildup. Xinhua criticized Japan's security policy shifts, while noting China's own defense budget has more than doubled in the last decade. Japan reaffirmed its non-nuclear principles in mid-December.

Was die Leute sagen

Initial reactions on X to China's dual-use export ban on Japan over PM Takaichi's Taiwan remarks include strong pro-China sentiments viewing it as justified retaliation and leverage over Japan's supply chains, neutral geopolitical analyses highlighting economic coercion tactics, and concerns about escalating East Asian tensions. Japan's protest calling the ban 'extremely regrettable' garners limited discussion.

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Japan plans G7 pushback against China's rare earth export curbs

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Following China's ban on dual-use exports to Japan's military, a Wall Street Journal report revealed broader restrictions on rare earths to Japanese firms. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama condemned the moves and said Japan will outline its stance at next week's G7 finance ministers' meeting in Washington.

One day after China's announcement of an export ban on dual-use goods to Japan, the restrictions took effect on January 7, threatening established trade flows amid escalating tensions over Taiwan remarks by PM Sanae Takaichi. Japan protested the move as 'unacceptable' and is now evaluating broader fallout from the wide-ranging list of affected military-civilian products.

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In the wake of China's January 7 ban on dual-use exports to Japan's military—prompted by politician Sanae Takaichi's Taiwan remarks and already protested by Tokyo as 'extremely regrettable'—analysts warn of vulnerabilities in the semiconductor sector, where Japan holds key leverage amid escalating tensions.

Following a Chinese think tank report warning of Japan's nuclear ambitions, Beijing's foreign and defense ministries issued sharp condemnations on Thursday against Tokyo's alleged remilitarization, including pushes to revise non-nuclear principles and explore nuclear submarines—moves that risk further souring bilateral relations.

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Building on plans for next week's G7 finance ministers' meeting, Japan is pursuing broader diplomatic outreach. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama heads to the US starting Sunday for critical minerals talks, Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi meets his US counterpart Thursday, and Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will summit with South Korea's Lee Jae-myung next week.

In a key step toward rare earth independence, Japan's research vessel Chikyu set sail from Shizuoka on January 12 for Minamitori Island waters to extract resource-rich seabed mud—building on responses to China's recent export restrictions, as previously covered. The mission coincides with G7 finance ministers' talks on supply chain security in Washington.

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A government survey released on Friday shows that 68% of Japanese respondents view China's growing military power as the top security concern, surpassing North Korea's nuclear threats. Conducted amid heightened tensions following Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's remarks on Taiwan, the poll also reveals record-high support for the Self-Defense Forces.

 

 

 

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