China hints at Xi meeting with Japan's new premier Takaichi

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japan's new premier, Sanae Takaichi may meet at APEC as China watches Japan's closer US ties and hopes for positive signals from Tokyo's new cabinet. - REUTERS/Filepic
BEIJING: China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Tuesday talked up "high-level exchanges" in a call with Japanese counterpart Toshimitsu Motegi, hinting at a potential meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japan's new premier, Sanae Takaichi.
AI Brief
- Xi and Japan's PM Takaichi may meet at APEC, offering a chance for dialogue amid Japan's hawkish stance on China.
- Takaichi met Trump to sign trade and defense deals, raising concerns in Beijing over shifting regional power dynamics.
- China hopes for improved ties, despite tensions over US troops in Japan and Takaichi's controversial visits to Yasukuni shrine.
Takaichi met with U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday, who welcomed her pledge to accelerate a military buildup and signed a series of deals on trade and rare earths.
Beijing will be wary of the U.S. and Japan forging closer ties under Takaichi, analysts say, seeing it as a potential shift in the balance of power across the Asia-Pacific region.
Be that as it may, "China has noticed several positive signals coming out of Japan's new cabinet," Wang said, without giving any further details.
"High-level exchanges are very important to China-Japan relations," he added.
Beijing said on Friday that Xi would meet several heads of state at the summit - which Trump is expected to skip - but only specified South Korean President Lee Jae Myung.
Xi met with then Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba at the APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting in Lima in November 2024.
China's long-held position on U.S.-Japan relations is that it opposes any acts it views as harmful to its interests in the region, including the stationing of American troops across the country, which analysts say help deter Chinese aggression towards Taiwan.
Takaichi, a hardline conservative who was approved by parliament as Japan's first female prime minister last week, is a regular visitor to Tokyo's Yasukuni shrine, which honours Japan's war dead, including some executed soldiers accused of war crimes in China.
"I hope Japan's new cabinet will take a good first step in exchanges with China," Wang said, using an expression likening relations to doing up a jacket - getting the first button right.
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