Quantcast
Latest Stories

US urges ‘cooler heads’ between Japan, China

In this Sept. 2, 2012 file photo, the survey ship Koyo Maru, left, chartered by Tokyo city officials, sails around Minamikojima, foreground, Kitakojima, middle right, and Uotsuri, background, the tiny islands in the East China Sea, called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. AP/Kyodo News

WASHINGTON – The United States called Tuesday for calm between Japan and China after Beijing sent ships to disputed islands in the East China Sea in response to Tokyo’s purchase of them.

“We think, in the current environment, we want cooler heads to prevail, frankly,” said Kurt Campbell, the assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs.

Campbell, echoing remarks this weekend by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the end of a tour of Asia, said that calm was critical because the region serves as a “cockpit of the global economy.”

“The stakes could not be bigger,” Campbell said at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank.

“We believe that peaceful dialogue and the maintenance of peace and security is of utmost importance always but particularly now in this set of circumstances,” Campbell said.

In line with repeated US statements, Campbell said that Washington did not take positions on the various and increasingly bitter territorial disputes around Asia.

China said that it was dispatching two marine surveillance ships to “assert its sovereignty” over the islands in the East China Sea known in Chinese as the Diaoyu and in Japan as the Senkaku islands.

The move came after Japan said it would nationalize the islands through a purchase from private Japanese landowners. The islands lie near potentially lucrative mineral resources and are strategically close to the Taiwan Strait.

Asia has been riveted by a series of disputes including tensions in the South China Sea and a flareup between US allies Japan and South Korea over islets in the Sea of Japan, which Koreans call the East Sea.

Clinton, speaking Sunday at an Asia-Pacific summit in Vladivostok, Russia, said that she urged Japan and South Korea to “lower the temperature and work together.”

More broadly in Asia, Clinton warned that it was “not in the interest of the United States or the rest of the world to raise doubts and uncertainties about the stability and peace in the region.”


Follow Us

Follow us on Facebook Follow on Twitter Follow on Twitter


Recent Stories:

Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step out? Get breaking alerts on your mobile.phone. Text ON INQ BREAKING to 4467, for Globe, Smart and Sun subscribers in the Philippines.



Copyright © 2013, .
To subscribe to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper in the Philippines, call +63 2 896-6000 for Metro Manila and Metro Cebu or email your subscription request here.
Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate. Or write The Readers' Advocate:
c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer Chino Roces Avenue corner Yague and Mascardo Streets, Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines Or fax nos. +63 2 8974793 to 94
Advertisement

News

  • Palace backs Comelec on proclaiming ‘Magic 12’
  • Student enrolls–using 41 names
  • Comelec chief smells watchdog conspiracy
  • Suspended party-list canvass resumes
  • Elated over foe’s loss, Digos City radioman does a ‘monty’
  • Sports

  • Aces pull off 3-game title sweep of Kings
  • Tenorio snares BPC award over Abueva
  • Cabrera Asian Karting Open junior champ
  • Calla second twice, paces Aboitiz tour
  • Divine Eagle tops TC first leg by a nose
  • Lifestyle

  • Evoking in line and color the most popular devotion in the Philippines
  • National Heritage Month revives traditional Santacruzan
  • Philippine ballet’s finest from here and abroad take centerstage in rare one-night gala
  • ‘Pioneers of Philippine Art’ exhibit draws from various collections
  • Poet Fidelito Cortes makes the everyday extraordinary
  • Entertainment

  • The way of a clown: Vice Ganda sets tears aside
  • Kids make tough guy Vin Diesel a ‘softie’
  • Film on old age wins in Jeonju
  • Night and Day: Promenading near the Palais
  • Buboy on his 7th Power and family
  • Business

  • SMC appeals disqualification from P1.7B LRT smart card project bidding
  • Continuing education to sustain competitive advantage
  • Make trade, not war
  • LNG hub to rise in Quezon
  • Wind projects in Ilocos Norte, Rizal get DOE certifications
  • Technology

  • Free Inquirer tablets for lucky INQSnap readers
  • Hong Kong launches first electric taxis
  • DepEd website now up and normal
  • Report: Yahoo nearing $1.1B acquisition of Tumblr
  • ‘Sonic’ video games coming to Nintendo
  • Opinion

  • A generation of Young Turks enters Senate
  • Editorial cartoon, May 20, 2013
  • Keep them safe
  • Game changer
  • Vote-buying in last polls raised inflation rate
  • Global Nation

  • Filipinos in Taiwan told: Limit activities
  • Santiago: Harassment of Filipinos in Taiwan may warrant MECO abolition
  • Boracay hotels, resorts hit by Taiwan tourist cancellations
  • ‘Patronage politics not an offshoot of PH culture, grew during US colonial period’
  • Philippines waiting for Taiwan anger to cool
  • Marketplace
    Advertisement
    Azure Skin Ad
    Azure Skin Ad
    © Copyright 1997-2013 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved