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US, Japan trust each other but both wary of China: poll
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) April 8, 2015


Taiwan president says China ties 'back to normal' after protests
Taipei (AFP) April 8, 2015 - Taiwan's embattled President Ma Ying-jeou said ties with China are "back to normal" after major protests against a trade pact with Beijing last year, despite continued public unease over mainland influence.

Relations with Beijing have warmed markedly since Ma came to power in 2008. But last March around 200 students occupied parliament for more than three weeks to demonstrate against the trade pact, while thousands rallied in support of what became known as the "Sunflower Movement".

It reflected public sentiment that Taiwan is leaning too heavily on China economically.

Taiwan and China split in 1949 at the end of a civil war, but Beijing still regards the island as part of its territory awaiting reunification.

There have been smaller protests in recent weeks against Taiwan's bid to join the Beijing-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and over controversial new Chinese flight routes over the Taiwan Strait.

But Ma insisted that it was business as usual.

"Cross-strait ties suffered a setback following the student movement last year, but the ties have since returned to normal," he told the Taipei Foreign Correspondents' Club.

"What we're working hard on at the present stage is exchanging liaison offices on each side. There is some progress," he said.

Since February last year, both sides have sent envoys on cross-strait visits -- the first official contact in more than six decades -- but there is still no permanent liaison office on either side.

Ma's Kuomintang party suffered its worst ever showing in local polls in November -- seen as a barometer for presidential elections in 2016 -- with its Beijing-friendly policy blamed for alienating many voters.

But Ma defended the policy.

"Before I took office, ties with the mainland were really tense and the United States was also very nervous," he said.

"For the first time in history the United States can maintain peaceful and friendly ties with Taiwan and the mainland simultaneously.

"What we've done is for the benefit of Taiwan," he said.

Ma, who must step down next year after completing two terms, said regular government surveys suggested a decline in the number of people who oppose the pace of his cross-strait rapprochement.

But opposition figures cast doubt.

"I think the public still mistrusts Ma's China policies and are concerned that his government is leaning too close to China," said protest leader Lai Yu-fen, of the Black Island Nation Youth Front.

Legislator Wu Ping-jui of the China-sceptic Democratic Progressive Party said Ma's China policy had "not been transparent and needs a thorough review".

Over seven decades after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and dragged the United States into a global war, Americans and Japanese overwhelmingly trust each other and are wary of China, an opinion poll has shown.

In contrast to the oft-heard calls from Beijing for more Japanese contrition over World War II, around two-thirds of Americans believe Tokyo has apologised enough or has no need to say sorry.

The findings, released Tuesday by the US-based Pew Research Center come just weeks before Shinzo Abe is set to travel to the United States, where he will become the first Japanese prime minister to address a joint session of the US Congress.

His speech will be carefully watched for any indication of how he will mark the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII later in the year, with Beijing urging him to "show sincerity" over his nation's past crimes.

But the poll by Pew found no significant animosity exists between people in Japan and the US, despite their four years of war until 1945 and the subsequent American occupation until 1952.

"Adversaries in World War II, fierce economic competitors in the 1980s and early 1990s, Americans and Japanese nonetheless share a deep mutual respect," the think tank said in its annual report based on the survey of 1,000 people from each country.

About 68 percent of Americans trust Japan and 75 percent of Japanese trust the United States, the survey showed, while only 30 percent of Americans and seven percent of Japanese trust China.

Six in ten Americans believe that the rise of China as a military and economic power makes relations between Japan and the United States more important, it said.

At the same time, "more Americans, especially young Americans, think it is important to have strong economic ties with China than believe it is important to have such ties with Japan," it said.

"A majority of Americans see Japan as a status quo economic power, neither rising nor declining."

Japanese brands fare well in US public opinion, with Sony seen in a favourable light by 88 percent of respondents and carmaker Toyota by 85 percent.

However, for Brand Abe, the news was not so good: "only 11 percent of Americans have a favourable view of current Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe."

"But this can largely be attributed to the fact that 73 percent say they have never heard of him," it said.

On questions of history, the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which killed 140,000 people and 70,000, respectively, has long divided Americans and Japanese.

In the latest survey, 56 percent of Americans say they believe the use of nuclear weapons was a justified means of ending the war; 34 percent said it was not.

In Japan, only 14 percent say the bombing was justified, versus 79 percent who say it was not.

"Despite this lingering disagreement over the justification for Hiroshima and Nagasaki, few Americans or Japanese believe Japan owes an apology for its actions during WWII," it said.

A total of 61 percent of Americans say either Japan has apologised sufficiently for the war or no apology is now necessary, against 29 percent who say Japan has not apologised enough for its actions during the conflict.

kh/hg/st

Sony

Toyota


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