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Articles

Sino-Japanese strategic relations: will rivalry lead to confrontation?

Pages 213-232 | Published online: 26 Jun 2009
 

Abstract

This article analyses the strategic dynamics of the Sino-Japanese relationship and argues that the potential for confrontation between China and Japan has been exaggerated. There is an underlying tendency in much of the literature to treat the emergence of rivalry between China and Japan since the end of the cold war as synonymous with an inevitable drift towards bilateral strategic confrontation. This article argues that Beijing and Tokyo are better placed to manage the strategic dimension of their bilateral relationship than many analysts have been willing to acknowledge thus far. To test this argument, the article examines two prominent case studies that lie at the heart of the contemporary and future Sino-Japanese bilateral strategic relationship: the territorial dispute over the East China Sea and Japan's virtual nuclear weapons capability.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

James Manicom

James Manicom is a PhD candidate in the School of Political and International Studies at Flinders University

Andrew O'Neil

Andrew O'Neil is an associate professor of international relations at the same institution

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