Posts tagged regional tensions

Japan arrests Chinese skipper in tense maritime row

Japan was Wednesday holding the captain of a Chinese fishing trawler that collided with two Japanese patrol ships near a disputed island chain, sparking a bitter row between Beijing and Tokyo.

Both Asian giants have lodged protests with each other’s ambassadors over the tense incident Tuesday in the East China Sea, which saw two minor collisions and a high-seas chase but caused no reported injuries.

The disputed string of five small islands — known as Senkaku in Japan, Diaoyu in China, and Diaoyutai in Taiwan — lies between Japan’s far-southern Okinawa island and Taiwan in an area believed to hold seabed oil deposits.

Controlled by Tokyo, but also long claimed by Beijing and Taipei, the uninhabited islands have often sparked regional tensions.

“We arrested the 41-year-old captain early Wednesday at sea on suspicion of interference with officers on duty,” said a Japan Coast Guard spokesman, mentioning a charge that carries a maximum three years’ jail.

“Questioning is set to begin. We will also investigate the vessel.”

The skipper was taken to Japan’s Ishigaki island, in Okinawa prefecture, where the Chinese vessel with its 14 crew was set to arrive later in the day.

The high-seas incident started Tuesday morning when the Japanese Coast Guard’s 1,349-ton patrol boat the Yonakuni ordered the Chinese trawler to cease operations in the disputed waters, said the Japanese Coast Guard.

In the ensuing confrontation, the Chinese boat’s bow hit the Yonakuni’s stern before it sailed off. About 40 minutes later it collided with another Japanese patrol boat, the Mizuki, the Coast Guard said.

Four Japanese patrol ships then chased the Chinese vessel, and Coast Guard personnel later boarded it to question the captain and crew over the incident and on suspicion of violating the fisheries law, the Coast Guard said.

The tense incident quickly sparked a row between Asia‘s two biggest economies, historical rivals who frequently quarrel over sea territories including areas rich in seabed energy and mineral resources.

Japanese senior foreign ministry official Akitaka Saiki on Tuesday informed the Chinese ambassador Cheng Yonghua that “Tokyo will enforce its domestic laws” and pursue a criminal case against the captain.

China expressed its “great concern” and vice foreign minister Song Tao summoned Japanese ambassador Uichiro Niwa, making “solemn representations”, the Xinhua state news agency said.

Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said Beijing had stressed that the islands have been part of Chinese territory since ancient times.

China urged Japan to stop “so-called law enforcement activities” in the area and to avoid actions that might “jeopardise the safety of Chinese fishing boats and Chinese people”.

On Wednesday morning, Japan’s top government spokesman, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshito Sengoku, reiterated at a news conference: “Our country is going to strictly deal with the case based on our law.”

But he also said that “it is necessary to deal with the case calmly, not to heat things up in Japan. We have to conduct diplomatic dialogue firmly. Japan’s stance is that a territorial problem does not exist.”

China’s state-controlled English-language Global Times said in a commentary: “If it were Chinese naval boats smashing into Japanese fishing boats in some disputed area, how would the Japanese public react?”

The newspaper warned of the risk of the row escalating, warning that “Japan’s irresponsible moves may eventually set fire to the Sino-Japanese relationship, or even force a military showdown.”

High-seas collisions trigger Japan-China diplomatic spat

A tense maritime incident Tuesday in which two Japanese patrol vessels and a Chinese fishing boat collided near a disputed island chain triggered a diplomatic spat between the Asian giants.

China expressed its “great concern” over the series of two collisions in the East China Sea, while Japan summoned a Chinese diplomat to protest the incident, in which no-one was reported injured and no vessels sank.

Chinese vice foreign minister Song Tao later summoned Japanese ambassador to China, Uichiro Niwa, and lodged “solemn representations”, the state Xinhua news agency said.

The uninhabited islands — known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China — lie between Japan’s Okinawa island and Taiwan. They are claimed by Tokyo, Beijing and Taipei and are frequently the focus of regional tensions.

Japan’s Ichiro Ozawa, who is vying to oust Prime Minister Naoto Kan in a party leadership race this month to lead the nation, said Sunday that Tokyo must strongly fend off Beijing’s claim to the disputed islets.

The incident started when Japan’s 1,349-ton patrol boat the Yonakuni ordered the Chinese trawler to cease fishing in the disputed waters, Kyodo News agency reported, citing the Japanese Coast Guard.

The Chinese boat’s bow then hit the Yonakuni’s stern and also collided with another Japanese patrol boat, the Mizuki, some 40 minutes later, Kyodo reported citing the coastguard.

Three Japanese patrol boats then chased the Chinese vessel and 22 Japanese personnel boarded the ship to question the Chinese crew on suspicion of violating the fisheries law, Kyodo reported.

Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu later told a regular news briefing that “China expresses great concern over this incident”.

Beijing had stressed to Tokyo that the islands have been part of Chinese territory since ancient times, she said.

China has urged Japan to stop the “so-called law enforcement activities in the adjacent borders” and not do anything that might “jeopardise the safety of Chinese fishing boats and Chinese people”.

“We will keep a close eye on developments and reserve the right to make a further response,” Jiang added.

Japan’s foreign ministry said it had “summoned a minister-counsellor at the Chinese embassy in Tokyo and lodged a protest over the incident”.

“We stated that the incident resulted from illegal fishing on China’s part,” the ministry said. “We asked the Chinese government help prevent a recurrence of the incident and give thorough instructions to Chinese fishing boats.”

Boat collision triggers Japan-China diplomatic spat

A tense maritime incident Tuesday in which two Japanese patrol vessels and a Chinese fishing boat collided near a disputed island chain triggered a diplomatic spat between the Asian giants.

China expressed its “great concern” over the series of two collisions in the East China Sea, while Japan summoned a Chinese diplomat to protest the incident, in which no-one was reported injured and neither vessel sank.

The uninhabited islands — known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China — lie between Japan’s Okinawa island and Taiwan. They are claimed by Tokyo, Beijing and Taipei and are frequently the focus of regional tensions.

Japan’s Ichiro Ozawa, who is vying to oust Prime Minister Naoto Kan in a party leadership race this month to lead the nation, said Sunday that Tokyo must strongly fend off Beijing’s claim to the disputed islets.

The incident Tuesday morning started when Japan’s 1,349-ton patrol boat the Yonakuni ordered the Chinese trawler to cease fishing in the disputed waters, Kyodo News agency reported, citing the Japanese Coast Guard.

The Chinese boat’s bow then hit the Yonakuni’s stern and also collided with another Japanese patrol boat, the Mizuki, some 40 minutes later, Kyodo reported citing the coastguard.

Three Japanese patrol boats then chased the Chinese vessel, and 22 Japanese personnel boarded the ship to question the Chinese crew on suspicion of violating the fisheries law, Kyodo reported.

Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu later told a regular news briefing that “China expresses great concern over this incident”.

Beijing had made “solemn representations” to Tokyo stressing that the islands have been part of Chinese territory since ancient times, she said.

China has urged Japan to stop the “so-called law enforcement activities in the adjacent borders” and not do anything that might “jeopardise the safety of Chinese fishing boats and Chinese people”.

“We will keep a close eye on developments and reserve the right to make a further response,” Jiang added.

Japan’s foreign ministry said it had “summoned a minister-counsellor at the Chinese embassy in Tokyo and lodged a protest over the incident”.

“We stated that the incident resulted from illegal fishing on China’s part,” the ministry said. “We asked the Chinese government help prevent a recurrence of the incident and give thorough instructions to Chinese fishing boats.”

Unrest in Iran — News Updates July 21, 2010

The Revolt Against The Supreme Leader Begins — Pajamas Media

First things first: so far as I know, the bazaars are still on strike. And yes, I know that the Los Angeles Times said it was over a couple of days ago, but for once I think they have it wrong. As of Sunday night, Iran time, the grand bazaar in Tehran, and those in Isfahan, and above all Tabriz, were all closed. Indeed, even many stores outside the bazaar in Tabriz were shut, and I have been receiving reports for several days claiming that a merchants’strike is spreading throughout East Azerbaijan. In the last few days, the bazaar in Mashad — a city of enormous religious importance to the regime — has also shut down, at least in part.

Read more ….

More News On The Unrest In Iran

Unrest In Baluchistan Contributes To Regional Tensions — Radio Free Europe
Reformist opposition daringly blames Ahmadinejad government for terror attacks — L.A. Times
Iranian unrest grows over economic woes — Asia Times
Stirrings in Iran: The Bazaar on Strike, Students Join In — The Nation
Shutters still down at Tehran bazaar despite compromise — AFP
Protests simmer among Iran’s powerful merchants — AP
Iran introduces new income tax rate — Press TV
The Iranian Regime’s Numbered Days — Melik Kaylan, Forbes

Eric Farnsworth: Lula Takes Tehran

Brazil’s president Luiz Inacio “Lula” da Silva travels to Iran this weekend to continue his quixotic quest to mediate peace in the Middle East. He is positioning himself and his nation as a go-between with a nuclear-minded Iran on one side, and on the other, much of the rest of the global community. This visit reciprocates the one made to Brazil by Iran’s leader, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in late 2009, which focused on energy and commercial exchange. More importantly, that visit provided crucial political space from the popular leader of an emerging nation at just the time that sanctions against Iran were under active consideration.

Since then, the situation has only intensified, with China and Russia, two of the so-called BRIC nations that just gathered for a summit in Brazil, expressing flexibility in working with the United States, Europe, and others to determine and implement sanctions against the Iranian regime. That leaves Brazil flying virtually solo, along with Turkey.

It’s a risky move by Brazil’s leader, who is putting his own credibility, if not his impressive legacy, on the line for a regime that has been identified as the top state sponsor of global terrorism. Yes, a delegation of business leaders and others will accompany Lula to Iran, but if the primary purpose of the trip were commercial, it could easily have been accomplished at a ministerial or even sub-ministerial level. President Lula’s participation changes the dynamic, and makes the visit fundamentally political.

There is a chance — however minute — that in fact Lula and his advisors will be able to broker a deal that will satisfy all parties and convince the Iranians to climb down from their nuclear ambitions, agreeing on a path forward that will reduce regional tensions and offer all parties a face-saving solution. But that’s unlikely, particularly given the nature of the Iranian regime.

More likely, Presidents Lula and Ahmadinejad and their foreign ministers have pre-cooked a scenario whereby Lula can come home with something that will justify the reputational risk he is taking, for example an agreement on nuclear reprocessing through third countries such as Russia and France. This would give Brazil a diplomatic “win,” embarrass the United States which is pushing hard for sanctions and would be upstaged by another hemispheric nation, and buy Iran additional time to continue its apparent breakneck effort to develop a nuclear option. Lula will look like a peacemaker, and it will be difficult under the circumstances to agree globally on a sanctions regime without allowing the new circumstances time to play out.

Unfortunately, most observers believe that Iran’s primary purpose is to play for time, and by using Brazil as a foil to divide the West, much as Iran was able to play Europe off for a number of years against the United States, Lula’s end-of-term diplomatic initiative could well backfire. His trip is a political life-line to the Iranian regime. Rather than working with the United States, Europe, and the other BRIC nations to build a more secure global environment, Lula’s gambit risks enabling an outcome that could dramatically heighten regional and indeed global tensions.

Nonetheless, expect Lula to return to Brasilia with a gift from Iran, no matter how ephemeral, that will allow him to claim the mantle, temporarily perhaps, of peacemaker. It only makes sense. In return, he’s giving the leader of Iran’s regime the greatest gift he possibly could — time.

It sure beats the national soccer team jersey he gave to President Obama.

More on Brazil


Why Is Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal Positive On Afghanistan?

In a report sent to the White House in September, Gen Stanley McChrystal, who commands US and Nato force in Afghanistan, warned that “increasing Indian influence in Afghanistan is likely to exacerbate regional tensions and encourage Pakistani counter measures.” Photo from DAWN.

U.S. General Offers Upbeat Views on Afghan War — New York Times

ISTANBUL — The senior commander of American and allied forces in Afghanistan offered a guarded but unexpectedly upbeat assessment of the war effort on Thursday, saying that while the situation remained dangerous it was no longer getting worse.

“I still will tell you that I believe the situation in Afghanistan is serious,” said the commander, Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal.

“I do not say now that I think it’s deteriorating,” he added. “And I said that last summer, and I believed that that was correct. I feel differently now. I am not prepared to say that we have turned the corner. So I’m saying that the situation is serious, but I think we have made significant progress in setting the conditions in 2009, and beginning some progress and that we’ll make real progress in 2010.”

Read more ….

More News On Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal’s “Upbeat” Assessment On Afghanistan

McChrystal: Afghan Security Deterioration Over, But No Win Yet — Voice of America
U.S. commander in Afghanistan says situation likely to improve — Washington Post
US war commander sees progress in Afghanistan — Washington Post/AP
U.S. commander sees Afghan progress — Reuters
Gen. McChrystal Says Afghanistan Has Stopped ‘Deteriorating’ — NPR
Afghan security better, says US commander McChrystal — BBC

My Comment: Lets see …. allied casualties are at record levels. The Taliban have shadow governments in each of Afghanistan’s provinces. Afghan forces are not meeting the expectations of US/NATO commanders. Afghan Government is still corrupt. Drug trade growing. NATO partners like Canada and Great Britain are preparing to leave next year.

Hmmmm …. the General must know something that I do not.

U.S. policy confusion on Pakistan and India

jinnah flagWhat is the U.S. policy towards Pakistan and India, and in particular over how to deal with their rivalry over Afghanistan which complicates U.S. efforts to bring stability there? I’ve been trying to find an answer for weeks now amid a raft of contradictory signals and statements coming from different U.S. officials.

First we had the leaked report by General Stanley McChrystal in September suggesting the issue should be handled with caution given Pakistani sensitivities about a big rise in India’s presence in Afghanistan following the fall of the Pakistani-backed Taliban in 2001.

“Indian political and economic influence is increasing in Afghanistan, including significant development efforts and financial investment,” it said. “In addition the current Afghan government is perceived by Islamabad to be pro-Indian. While Indian activities largely benefit the Afghan people, increasing Indian influence in Afghanistan is likely to exacerbate regional tensions and encourage Pakistani counter-measures in Afghanistan or India.”

Then we had a series of reports, most recently here, suggesting Washington might welcome a bigger role for India in Afghanistan – precisely the kind of development that would exacerbate tensions with Pakistan given the current sour mood between New Delhi and Islamabad.

U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke toured the region saying President Barack Obama’s administration would welcome better relations between India and Pakistan. But then he was followed by Defense Secretary Robert Gates who, if anything, actually worsened tensions between the two by saying that India might retaliate in the event of a another big attack like the Nov. 2008 assault on Mumbai.

Gates made a similar comment towards the end of last year, when he said al Qaeda and its Islamist allies might try to use an attack to provoke a conflict between Pakistan and India. The problem this time around was the context. Saying this in Washington is one thing; saying it in India is quite different. Pakistan had already been jumpy about Indian intentions after its army chief said the military should be prepared to fight a two-front war against both China and Pakistan. Indian analysts describe those remarks, made at a closed-door seminar, as an aspirational view of the need for military preparedness, rather than any kind of immediate threat; but they went down badly in Pakistan and therefore coloured the way Gates’ remarks were interpreted.

You have to wonder whether Gates had been properly briefed about the context when he talked about Indian losing patience in the event of another big attack, or indeed why someone with such long experience of the region would make what appeared to be a diplomatic gaffe shortly before flying into Pakistan to try to win support there.  Did he, to borrow a word from the now U.S. Secretary of State, ”misspoke”?

 Juan Cole, who has generally been supportive of the Obama administration, was unforgiving, writing on his blog Informed Comment that its policies in Afghanistan and Pakistan were in disarray:

“Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates’s trip to Pakistan this weekend has in many ways been public relations disaster, and I think it is fair to say that he came away empty-handed with regard to his chief policy goals in Islamabad. Getting Pakistan right is key to President Barack Obama’s policy of escalating the Afghanistan War, and judging by Gates’s visit to Islamabad, Obama is in worse shape on the AfPak front than he is even in Massachusetts. Since he has bet so heavily on Afghanistan and Pakistan, this rocky road could be momentous for his presidency.”

Meanwhile Britain is hosting a conference on Afghanistan this week aiming to flesh out the timetable set by Obama for drawing down troops by 2011 and to convince regional players to cooperate rather than compete over a country which has long been a battleground for proxy wars. But as I wrote in this analysis, anything that might now be achieved in terms of easing tensions between India and Pakistan is likely to come too little, too late to deliver policy results in time for the 2011 deadline.

According to Steve Coll at the New America Foundation, who I quoted in the analysis, Washington’s need to achieve results in Afghanistan by 2011 is at odds with the longer-term clock followed by India and Pakistan. ”My sense is that the administration feels stymied by India’s continued insistence that it does not want any outside help and the frustratingly slow pace by which India and Pakistan are trying (to find a way back to negotiations),” he said. ”The U.S. doesn’t seem to be able to construct a breakthrough.”

The tensions between India and Pakistan complicate the current situation by undermining U.S. efforts to convince the Pakistan Army to turn on Afghan Taliban militants which it may eventually need to counter Indian influence in Afghanistan in the event of a U.S. withdrawal.  Pakistan has also kept the bulk of its forces on the Indian border, limiting its capacity to mobilise troops to fight militants on the Afghan border.  In the short to medium term, India and Pakistan are at odds over how far Taliban fighters should be brought into a process of reconciliation in Afghanistan. And in the long term, both could end up backing opposite sides in any renewed civil war between a weak government in Kabul and Taliban militants active in parts of the countryside. Then of course, both countries have nuclear weapons, so even without Afghanistan, it’s not a place where you would ever want tensions to escalate out of control.

So you would think that after a year in office, the U.S. administration would have a policy on how to deal with relations between India and Pakistan and their roles in Afghanistan. But I’m still looking for it.