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This Article is From Feb 28, 2013

Japanese PM quotes Britain's Iron Lady on island dispute

Japanese PM quotes Britain's Iron Lady on island dispute
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
Tokyo: Japan's prime minister on Thursday quoted comments by former British premier Margaret Thatcher about the Falklands War as he spoke about Tokyo's acrimonious islands dispute with China.

Shinzo Abe channeled the Iron Lady in a speech to parliament in which he talked about Japan's resolve to defend the islands claimed by Beijing in the East China Sea.

"Our national interests are immutable forever," Abe told lawmakers.

"They aim at making the seas the foundation of our nation's existence completely open, free and peaceful."

Aggressors should never triumph, he said.

"Former Prime Minister Thatcher, recalling the Falklands War, said she tried to follow the principle that above all, international law the fundamental rule for the entire world must prevail against the use of force," Abe said.

The comments echo those by Thatcher in her autobiography in which she reflected on the 1982 conflict with Argentina over the ownership of the Falklands after an Argentine invasion.

Thatcher sent a task force that recaptured the islands after a 74-day war, which left 649 Argentines and 255 Britons dead.

While few observers see all-out war between Beijing and Tokyo over the Tokyo-controlled Senkakus, some have raised fears that a mistake or a miscalculation by a low-level commander could trigger a military incident.

In January Japan said a Chinese warship had locked its weapons-targeting radar onto a Japanese frigate and a helicopter in open waters near the Tokyo-controlled Senkaku islands.

On Thursday, Japan scrambled fighter jets to head off a Chinese government plane flying towards the islands, the defence ministry said.

It said the Y-12 propeller plane did not enter airspace around the islands and headed back towards China after Japan's military planes became airborne.

Earlier on Thursday Japan's coastguard said three Chinese surveillance ships had been in the territorial waters of the island chain, which Beijing claims as the Diaoyus.

The dispute between Asia's two largest economies intensified in September when Tokyo nationalised three of the islands, in what it said was a mere administrative change of ownership.

In his speech, Abe reiterated his long-held position that the islands are an inviolable part of Japanese territory and that no dispute exists.

He noted that he had proposed the first rise in defence spending for 11 years in the context of repeated incursions by Chinese ships into waters around the islands, whose seabed is believed to harbour valuable mineral reserves.

"(But) the door to dialogue is always open," Abe said.

"I will call on (China) to return to the start line - a strategic partnership of mutual benefit that does not get derailed by single issues."

Abe, fresh from a summit with US President Barack Obama in Washington last week, vowed to strengthen the Japan-US alliance, which he described as "precious".

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