6 Articles
Tags :Sino-Japanese relations

Preface In just one day, two things happened one after another. China sent a tough signal, and Japan quickly adjusted its statement on China. This was no coincidence, but the beginning of a head-on collision. What appears on the surface is a change of wording, but behind the scenes is a conflict of lines. 1. It is not a diplomatic friction

Taking advantage of the situation | Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Lin Jian said at a regular press conference on the 24th that a criminal who claimed to be an active official of the Japanese Self-Defense Forces broke into the Chinese Embassy in Japan over the wall and threatened to kill Chinese diplomats in the so-called "name of God."

China News Service, Beijing, March 8 (Reporter Zhang Su) The Fourth Session of the 14th National People's Congress held a diplomatic-themed press conference on the 8th. Wang Yi, member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and Minister of Foreign Affairs, raised "four consecutive questions" when answering questions about China-Japan relations.

China News Service, Beijing, March 8. Title: Citing ancient teachings to talk about history, Wang Yi discusses the diplomacy of major countries. China News Service reporter Zeng Yue and Guo Chaokai held a press conference on diplomacy at the fourth session of the 14th National People's Congress on March 8. Wang Yi, member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and Minister of Foreign Affairs, answered questions from Chinese and foreign reporters.

With the consolidation of Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's power in office, Japan is being coerced by right-wing forces to accelerate its arming of itself. The announcement of the ban from the Ministry of Commerce of China put China's bargaining chip and its own responsibilities on the table.

According to Japanese media reports, the Japanese deep-sea drilling ship "Earth" successfully extracted sludge containing rare earths at a water depth of 6,000 meters in the waters of Nantori Island in the Pacific Ocean. It seems that Japan has been chanting the slogan "get rid of the rare earth stuck" for so many years.