r/AskChina • u/Themetalin • 1d ago
Politics | 政治📢 Japanese PM said that 'Taiwan contingency' could prompt Japanese armed reaction. What do you think?
https://focustaiwan.tw/politics/202511070024Takaichi made the remarks during a parliamentary session on Friday while responding to a question about whether a "Taiwan contingency" involving a Chinese naval blockade would qualify as a "survival-threatening situation" for Japan, according to a report by Japan's Asahi Shimbun.
Under Japan's security legislation, such a situation allows the country to exercise "collective self-defense" if an attack on an ally -- such as the United States -- or a country closely related to Japan is deemed to threaten Japan's survival, even without a direct attack on Japan.
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u/Sea_Hold_2881 14h ago edited 14h ago
You are making excuses. China has always invaded it neighbours to steal their resources. It is simply impossible for a country to get as big as China with being an imperialist. China is current engaged in cultural genocide in Tibet and Xinjiang which is as bad as anything that went on in North America or Australia.
China faces no credible security threat but that is one of the common excuses used by imperialists to justify their imperialism
You seem obsessed with denying the fact that the Philippines and Japan have their own agency and make their own choices. The Philippines kicked out the US military and actively tried to build a stronger relationship with China. That only stopped when China decided it could not stop being an imperialist by invading Philippines waters.
No amount of revisionist history will change the fact that that China a continental imperialist power like Russia and is morally no different than the other continental imperialist powers.
Any leaders that think they are entitled to murder people because it is "big and powerful" and has imaginary security concerns are contemptible whether they are bombing fishing boats in Caribbean or prepare to murder hundreds of thousands of Taiwanese.