China-Japan tensions put Trump in a bind, as Tokyo eyes US talks: analysts

Amid US-Japan joint patrols responding to China-Russia activities, analysts say the Trump administration faces a dilemma in backing ally Japan while maintaining China trade ties. Tokyo hopes for high-level US talks, but resolution depends on direct Beijing-Tokyo engagement.

The latest flare-up in China-Japan tensions—sparked by joint Chinese-Russian aircraft patrols near Japanese airspace, prompting a US-Japan bomber-jet flight over the Sea of Japan last Wednesday—has put the Trump White House in a delicate position, a Chinese analyst said.

As detailed in prior coverage, Japan's defense ministry confirmed the joint exercise on Thursday, reaffirming the allies' resolve against unilateral status quo changes and bolstering deterrence.

Navigating longstanding alliance commitments to Japan while preserving a fragile trade truce with China presents a 'potential dilemma' for Washington, the analyst noted.

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi expressed hope Wednesday for another meeting with her US counterpart amid the standoff with Beijing. Another expert emphasized that breakthroughs in the dispute will hinge on direct dialogue between the Asian neighbors.

The episode highlights US diplomatic challenges as fraying China-Japan ties test the balance between security pacts and economic interests.

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Illustration of strained China-Japan relations showing torn flags, banned seafood, and boycott symbols over Taiwan remarks.
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China says trade ties with Japan severely damaged by Taiwan remarks

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China's commerce ministry stated that trade cooperation with Japan has been severely damaged by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's comments on Taiwan, urging her to retract them. The diplomatic spat intensified after Takaichi told parliament on November 7 that a hypothetical Chinese attack on Taiwan could trigger a Japanese military response. Beijing has reinstated a ban on Japanese seafood imports and called for a travel boycott.

As 2026 dawns, Japan grapples with uncertainties over the US alliance under President Trump, fearing a potential regional deal with China amid fresh lows in Beijing-Tokyo ties following PM Sanae Takaichi's Taiwan comments.

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Two weeks after Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's controversial Taiwan remarks ignited tensions, China has escalated with diplomatic, economic, and military pressures. Tokyo refuses to back down, and analysts warn the standoff's length hinges on the US-China-Japan triangle.

A bipartisan group of U.S. senators has introduced a resolution condemning China's economic, military, and diplomatic pressure on Japan amid tensions over Taiwan. The measure expresses unwavering support for the U.S.-Japan alliance and recognizes Japan as a key partner in maintaining a free and open Indo-Pacific. It comes in response to China's hard-line stance following Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's remarks on a potential Taiwan contingency.

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During the 20th round of China-Russia strategic security consultations in Moscow, the two sides exchanged views on Japan and reached a high degree of consensus, vowing to uphold World War II victory outcomes and oppose any whitewashing of colonial aggression. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian urged Japan to retract erroneous remarks on Taiwan and take concrete actions to enable normal exchanges.

Amid ongoing China-Japan tensions sparked by Sanae Takaichi's prior Taiwan remarks, Japan is bolstering ties with South Korea while facing Beijing's new export curbs on rare earths and dual-use items, prompting stockpiling and G7 coordination.

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China has escalated its dispute with Japan over Taiwan to the United Nations, accusing Tokyo of threatening armed intervention and vowing to defend itself in the sharpest terms yet in the two-week-old row. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's remarks linking a potential Chinese attack on Taiwan to Japan's survival have sparked backlash, including economic measures from Beijing.

 

 

 

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