Hedging Their Bets, China, Japan and South Korea Push Trilateral Ties

Hedging Their Bets, China, Japan and South Korea Push Trilateral Ties
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se and Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida during the 7th trilateral foreign ministers’ meeting, Seoul, South Korea, March 21, 2015 (AP photo by Ahn Young-joon).

Foreign ministers from China, Japan and South Korea gathered in Seoul last month to discuss ways to restore trilateral diplomacy in the triangle of Northeast Asia. This was the first high-level trilateral meeting in nearly three years, the chasm between all three countries fueled in large part by the toxic state of bilateral relations between Tokyo and Beijing over their territorial dispute in the East China Sea. Compounding tensions are long-standing, historical grievances around World War II and the perception, widely held in Seoul and Beijing, that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is bent on revising the traditional narrative of Japan’s culpability during the war.

Despite these strains, trilateralism should not be underestimated. It has already allowed all parties to compartmentalize their bilateral grievances and provided a kind of diplomatic camouflage to engage despite outstanding differences. After all, before their half-hour meeting today on the sidelines of the Asian African Summit in Indonesia, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Abe had only met once—a brief meeting in Beijing last fall—since Tokyo’s decision to purchase three of the disputed Senkaku Islands, which China claims as the Diaoyu, in September 2012. Meanwhile, the Japan-South Korea relationship has been mired in a similar diplomatic impasse. South Korean President Park Geun-hye has not agreed to a summit with Abe since she took office in early 2013, citing Japan’s revisionism of its actions in South Korea during World War II. Yet those tensions didn’t stop last month’s trilateral meeting, nor a meeting last week of South Korea and Japan’s defense and foreign ministers, their first high-level security talks in five years, in an effort to reignite cooperation.

Caution from Beijing and Seoul over the Abe administration’s expected statements this summer, to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, has prompted both sides to wait out engaging Abe more energetically until at least the fall. This high-level bilateral pause, though, has presented an opportunity for trilateral dialogue. More importantly, the minister-level meeting laid some common ground for the resumption of a trilateral summit among all three leaders. The summit was an annual occurrence until the Senkaku row sunk Sino-Japanese ties in late 2012. The question now, however, is timing, with China hesitant to cede any diplomatic concession to Japan before the summer that Abe could capitalize on during the war commemorations.

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