Japan to drop ‘most important’ tag for China ties

WorldPolitics
24 Mar 2026 • 3:48 PM MYT
The Sun Daily
The Sun Daily

For the latest news and features from Malaysia and the rest of the world.

image is not available

Japan downgrades China ties in 2026 Bluebook, citing rising tensions, security concerns, and supply chain shifts with U.S. cooperation

TOKYO: ​Japan will downgrade its description of ties with China from “one of its most important” in an annual diplomatic report, according to ⁠a draft reviewed by Reuters, as relations with Beijing worsen.

The 2026 Diplomatic Bluebook, which Prime Minister ​Sanae Takaichi’s government is expected to approve next month, ‌will instead describe China as an important ​neighbour and the relationship as “strategic” and “mutually beneficial.”

The draft cites a series of confrontations with Beijing over the past year, including export controls on rare ​earths, radar lock-ons targeting Japanese military aircraft and increased pressure around Taiwan.

The shift ⁠in ‌tone underscores ​a deterioration in ties that has ​become entrenched since November, when Takaichi angered Beijing by ​saying that Japan could deploy its military if a Chinese move against neighbouring Taiwan also threatened its territory.

Beijing responded by reimposing restrictions on Japanese seafood imports, urging its citizens to avoid travel to ‌Japan and announcing curbs on rare earths and critical minerals used in electronic components.

Takaichi has said her remarks were in line with a decade-old security law, while a report by U.S. intelligence agencies last week said she ⁠had sharply ‌departed from the rhetoric of previous Japanese leaders. Her government rejected that assessment.

In a speech to parliament last month, Takaichi warned ​of Chinese “coercion” and mounting economic and security threats posed by Beijing and ​its ​regional partners Russia and North Korea.

During a meeting between ‌U.S. President ​Donald Trump and Takaichi at the White House on Thursday, Tokyo and Washington unveiled a joint action plan to develop alternatives to China for critical minerals and rare earths ​supply chains.