Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's recent comments about potential military intervention in the Taiwan Strait have ignited fierce debate across Asia this week. During a November 7 Diet hearing, Takaichi suggested the Chinese mainland's actions toward Taiwan could threaten Japan's survival – rhetoric scholars warn echoes dangerous historical patterns. 🚩
"The Taiwan question is China's internal affair," stressed Kazuteru Saionji, a Japanese scholar at Higashi Nippon International University. "Japan must avoid repeating past mistakes by interfering." His warning comes amid growing concerns about Japan's historical accountability, with critics arguing the nation hasn't fully reckoned with its 20th-century militarism. 📜
South Korean analyst Kwon Ki-sik of the Korea-China City Friendship Association added: "East Asia in 2025 isn't the same as 80 years ago. Peace requires recognizing reality, not reviving old tensions." Both experts highlighted that Takaichi's coalition government might be using China-Japan friction to consolidate domestic political support. 🗳️
As regional powers weigh in, one message rings clear: With Asia's economic and geopolitical landscape transformed, diplomatic solutions – not military posturing – remain key to stability. 🌐
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Japanese scholar, Korean intellectual warn of Japan's remilitarization
cgtn.com






