China In Context

Japan-China Tensions — Taiwan, Tourism, Migration

Dec 1, 2025
Rupert Wingfield Hayes, experienced journalist and former BBC correspondent in Beijing, Tokyo and Taiwan, offers analysis on rising Japan-China tensions. He discusses provocative parliamentary remarks about Taiwan. He traces historical memories from 1895, links nationalist politics to anti-immigrant and overtourism backlashes, and surveys economic and security frictions shaping the region.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

History Makes Taiwan Comments Toxic

  • Japan's remarks on Taiwan are deeply sensitive because of historical baggage dating to 1895 and Japanese rule of Taiwan.
  • Rupert Wingfield-Hayes says any Japanese PM comment on Taiwan will be closely scrutinised by Beijing.
INSIGHT

Hardline China Rhetoric Pays Politically

  • Anti-China rhetoric is politically popular in contemporary Japan and wins support from nationalistic voters.
  • Wingfield-Hayes notes attacks on China appeal to younger Japanese and bolster right-wing parties like Sanseito.
INSIGHT

Constitution Reinterpretation Enables Taiwan Role

  • Japan's pacifist constitution limits military action, but reinterpretations since 2015 allow defending allies.
  • Takaichi's Taiwan remarks signal willingness to treat a Taiwan attack as a threat to Japan's survival.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app