Wednesday 16 January 2013

The conflict of Taiwan Relation Act and the Anti-Secession Law .

                   During  Abe's  visit   to  Indonesia , Thiland ,and  Vietnam  for   pursuading  to  contain  China  but  too  late  .  Japan  is   becoming  the  ally  of   the   United  State  .  as  a  N.A.T.O.    member  state  .  Japan  should  not  forget   the  ASEAN  way  .  Let   this   way   takes  reins  in  the  South-East  Asian  region's  democratization  . 
         We  should  not  forget  the  following  Treaties  and  Laws.
1. The  R.O.C.- U.S.A.  mutual  defense  treaty of  1955  was  termited  in  1980  .
2. The  U.S.,  Japan   security  treaty  of  1960 .
3.  The  treaty  of  Taipei  was   abrogated   by  Japan  in  1972 .
4. The  Taiwan  Relation  Act  of  1979 , on  March  29  .
5.  The  Anti-Secession  Law  ( the  P.R.C. )  which  was  passed  by   the  third  conference  of  the  10th  National  People  Congress  on  March  14  , 2005  .
   According  to  the  two  conflict  Laws  ,  the  Taiwan  Relation  Act  and  The  Anti-Secession  Law  , if  the  Sino-Japanese  war  will  be  happened , Taiwan  will  be  occupied   by   eithe  China  or   the  ally  of   Japan  and  the  U.S.  Taiwan   should   be  ready  for   self-defence  and   self-determination  ,  as   Taiwan  doesn't   want  to   war  with   any   country  but   want   to  peace. 

Chinese government ships have been sailing in and out of what Japan says are its territorial waters around the islands, and in recent weeks Japanese fighters have been scrambled on a number of occasions after what Japan called an airspace violation by a Chinese government plane late last year.
Some Japanese businesses operating in China were also hit by fall-out from the row - last week Mr Abe criticised Beijing for allowing businesses to be damaged to achieve "political objectives".
The nations of Asean, meanwhile, have appeared divided in recent months over how to handle members' disputes over the South China Sea.
Japan's Asahi newspaper said in an editorial that it was vital for "countries facing challenges posed by China's growing economic and military power to bolster their co-operation".
"But there are differences among Asean members in their stances toward China. Any move that creates the perception that Japan is working with the United States to contain China's expansion could cause a rift among Asean countries," it said.
An editorial in China's vocal state-run daily Global Times entitled "Japan's hopes to contain China laughable", meanwhile, said Mr Abe's visit would "not bring China a sense of crisis".
"We can understand that Japan wants to strengthen its interests in South East Asia when the prospects of Sino-Japanese relations look bleak," it said.
But China was the driving force of geopolitical change in Asia, it went on. "Japan's negotiations with claimants in South China Sea disputes will have no effect."
Please!   enlarge   the  following    piece  of  Note   . 


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