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Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

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Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

2025-11-15 13:23 Last Updated At:23:37

Chinese Ambassador to Japan Wu Jianghao met Japan's Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs Takehiro Funakoshi on Friday to lodge solemn representations and a formal protest over Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China.  

Wu said that Takaichi's blatant and provocative remarks on China's Taiwan during a parliamentary debate violated basic common sense, crossed China's red line, threatened with force, and called for war. Moreover, she refused to admit her mistakes, refused to retract her statements or mitigate the adverse impact. It is a complete misjudgment of the situation and an overestimation of one's own strength.

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Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

The remarks constituted a gross interference in China's internal affairs and violated international law, the basic norms governing international relations, the one-China principle and the spirit of the four political documents between China and Japan, and severely undermined the post-war international order and the political foundation of China-Japan relations, Wu said.

China is strongly indignant and will not tolerate this, and has lodged solemn representations and a strong protest, the ambassador added.  

Wu pointed out that Taiwan is China's Taiwan and the Taiwan question is at the very heart of China's core interests. How to resolve the Taiwan question and realize national reunification is a matter for the Chinese people to decide and brooks no interference by any external force. China's national reunification must be and will definitely be fulfilled.

Takaichi administration's clamor for military intervention in the Taiwan Strait is a blatant challenge to China's core interests. It is actively tying Japan to the chariot to divide China, and will ultimately lead Japan to a dead end, said the ambassador.

Wu emphasized that this year marks the 80th anniversary of the victory of the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War, as well as the 80th anniversary of the restoration of Taiwan. Japan committed innumerable crimes during its colonial rule in Taiwan. Japanese militarists have waged aggression more than once under the pretext of "survival-threatening situation," but ultimately suffered shameful defeats.

Wu said that China solemnly warns the Japanese side that today's China is no longer the China of the past. Should the Japanese side dare to use force to interfere in the Taiwan question, it will constitute an act of aggression, and only suffer a crushing defeat. China strongly urges Japan to deeply reflect on its history, retract its egregious statements, and stop its provocations and overstepping behaviors. Otherwise, it must bear all the consequences that follow.

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

Chinese ambassador to Japan strongly protests Takaichi's erroneous remarks regarding China

U.S. stocks ended higher on Monday, recovering from early session heavy losses, as indications of a potential swift conclusion to the ongoing U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran triggered a sharp pullback in global oil prices.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 239.25 points or 0.5 percent, to 47,740.8. The S and P 500 added 55.97 points or 0.83 percent to 6,795.99. The Nasdaq Composite Index increased by 308.27 points or 1.38 percent, to 22,695.95.

Nine of the 11 primary S and P 500 sectors ended in the green. Technology and communication services led the gainers, advancing 1.8 percent and 1.13 percent, respectively. Meanwhile, the financials and energy sectors led the laggards, declining 0.52 percent and 0.43 percent, respectively.

The broader market turned positive in afternoon trading following remarks from U.S. President Donald Trump suggesting the war with Iran could conclude sooner than anticipated. He reportedly told a CBS journalist that "the war is very complete, pretty much."

The geopolitical developments prompted a dramatic reversal in energy markets. West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures for April delivery, which had surged past 119 U.S. dollars per barrel in overnight trading for the first time since 2022, settled at 94.77 dollars a barrel.

The sudden drop in oil prices immediately relieved travel and leisure equities, which are highly sensitive to fuel costs. Shares of major U.S. carriers, including Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and American Airlines, alongside cruise operators such as Norwegian Cruise Line, Carnival, and Royal Caribbean, erased earlier losses to finish higher.

In the technology sector, all of the major "Magnificent Seven" stocks rebounded from early declines to post gains. Additionally, memory chip manufacturers saw significant upward movement, with SanDisk and Western Digital finishing up nearly 12 percent and 7 percent, respectively.

Despite the session's optimism, some market experts warned that investors might underestimate the risks of a broader economic recession or an equity market correction. Analysts at Deutsche Bank noted that a continuous stream of global shocks over the past four years has left investors somewhat desensitized to short-term disruptions, leaving overall equity positioning slightly below neutral.

Conversely, analysts at Morgan Stanley offered a more optimistic outlook, forecasting that U.S. equities will likely remain constructive for at least another year despite the elevated geopolitical risks. "We think we're closer to the end of this rolling correction than the beginning and remain constructive over the next 6-12 months," analysts said.

U.S. stocks finish higher as Trump says war could be over soon

U.S. stocks finish higher as Trump says war could be over soon

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