US-Japan-S Korea meet: China warns of 'increasing tensions'
Beijing: China is renewing its criticism of this weekend's summit among the leaders of the US, Japan and South Korea, saying no country should “seek its own security at the expense of the security interests of others and of regional peace and stability”.
“The international community has its own judgment as to who is creating contradictions and increasing tensions,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told reporters at a daily briefing Friday.
“Attempts to form various exclusive groups and cliques and to bring bloc confrontation into the AsiaPacific region are unpopular and will definitely spark vigilance and opposition in the countries of the region,” Wang said.
The summit at the the rustic Camp David presidential retreat seeks to further tighten security and economic ties between Japan and South Korea, two nations whose historically frosty relations have rapidly thawed over the last year as they share concerns about China's assertiveness in the Pacific and North Korea's persistent nuclear threats.
China is extremely sensitive to any moves it perceives as seeking to contain its rise to dominance in Asia and has traditionally counted on the historical enmity between Tokyo and Seoul to keep its rivals divided and weaken the US system of regional alliances.
Beijing has made clear the current rapprochement between the two was something it very much did not want to see and its top diplomat, Wang Yi, last month made a clumsy and much-criticised appeal to racial-cultural similarities between Chinese, Japanese and Koreans as an alternative to partnering with the West.
“No matter how yellow you dye your hair, or how sharp you make your nose, you'll never turn into a European or American, you'll never turn into a Westerner,” said Wang, a former foreign minister who now heads the ruling Communist Party's foreign affairs commission.
“One needs to know where one's roots are,” Wang added.
President Joe Biden is looking to use the summit to urge South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to firmly turn the page on their countries' difficult shared history.
The Japan-South Korea relationship is a delicate one because of differing views of World War II history and Japan's colonial rule over the Korean Peninsula.
Past efforts to tighten security cooperation between Seoul and Tokyo have progressed by fits and starts. (AP)