The Japanese ambassador to Beijing, Uichiro Niwa, and his wife were riding in their limo this week when an unknown Chinese man approached and tore the mini-flag off the hood. There is some debate about whether the limo was blocked in a coördinated effort by two cars, or if it was simply stopped by traffic. The distinction only matters because it could contain a hint of whether this was a crime of passion or premeditation—an opportunistic move by an overzealous patriot, or something closer to the first physical manifestation of an ugly period in Sino-Japanese relations. There is no debate about why it happened, however: The two countries are in the midst of an intense spasm of animosity over five disputed islands in the East China Sea. (For an update on that fight, I suggest a recent op-ed in the Times by Peter Hays Gries, a University of Oklahoma professor who has made a specialty of nationalism in China.)
Title
A Diplomatic Incident in China
Topics:
Politics