Japan 'two-faced' for seeking closer ties while warning of China threat, Chinese state media says
BEIJING — An editorial in a Chinese state-controlled newspaper on Thursday (April 18) admonished "two-faced" Japan for inaccurately portraying it as a regional security threat while chasing more stable bilateral ties, warning of Chinese measures if Tokyo acted recklessly.
In his address to the US Congress last week, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida called China's military actions "an unprecedented and the greatest strategic challenge" to the world, and vowed deeper strategic co-operation with Washington, placing China and Russia's military actions as top threats.
In an editorial on Thursday, the ruling Communist Party's official newspaper said Japan claimed to be promoting bilateral relations but was also attempting to provoke confrontation by exaggerating China as a threat, describing Japan as "typical of a 'two-faced person' with no credibility".
People's Daily in the editorial accused Japan of exaggerating the security threat as an excuse for its own military build-up.
The editorial also said US and Japanese discussions on Taiwan, which China claims as part of its territory, were a "gross" interference in China's internal affairs.
Japan's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the editorial.
Tokyo's moves to strengthen ties with its former World War Two enemy to counter Beijing have increasingly hindered the outlook for any near-term rapprochement between Japan and China, whose ties have come under strain over issues from Japan's release of treated radioactive water into the ocean to China's detention of Japanese citizens on suspicion of espionage.
Japan and China have also clashed over mutual maritime claims in the East China Sea, as well as China's actions against the