17 Sept, 2012
TOKYO (Reuters) - The United
States urged Japan and China on Monday to settle their
increasingly angry dispute over islands claimed by both sides, saying it was in
everyone's interests to have good relations between Asia two biggest
economies.
The mounting tension over ownership of the
islands in the East China
Sea triggered protests in a number of cities across China at the weekend
and warnings from Beijing officials that it could hurt Japan's trade with its
biggest export market.
"Obviously we're concerned by the
demonstrations (in China) and we're concerned by the conflict that is taking
place over the Senkaku islands, and the message that I have tried to convey is a
message that we have to urge calm and restraint on all sides," Panetta told
reporters.
China and Japan both claim the islands,
called Senkaku by Japan and Diaoyu by China, which lie in waters believed to be
rich in natural gas.
The intensity of the dispute, which has
been dragging on for years, suddenly increased last week after the Japanese
government bought some of the islands from a private Japanese owner.
Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba
earlier told reporters that Tokyo and Washington agreed that the disputed
islands were covered by a U.S.-Japan security treaty.
Panetta said that while his government
stood by its obligations under the treaty with Japan, it did not take any side
over who had sovereignty over the islands.
"...the United States, as a matter of
policy, does not take a position with regard to competing sovereignty claims.
Having said that, we expect that these issues will be resolved peacefully and
although we understand the differences here with regard to jurisdiction, it is
extremely important that diplomatic means on both sides be used to try to
constructively resolve these issues," he said.
Panetta also said that he had agreed with Japan to locate a second missile defense radar on Japanese territory to protect against a ballistic missile threat from North Korea.
North Korea, which has long been trying to
build a nuclear arsenal, has also been working on a ballistic missile which
would be able to reach the U.S. mainland. However, its long-range rocket tests
have to date all failed.
"(The radar) will enhance the alliance's
ability to defend Japan, our forward deployed forces and the U.S. homeland from
a ballistic missile threat posed by North Korea," Panetta said.
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