Japan is quietly but firmly pushing back against Washington's efforts to build an economic bloc against China — even as it negotiates for relief from Trump-era tariffs. While Japan is still trying to strike a deal with the US before the current reprieve expires, it's not signing up for an anti-China agenda. Officials familiar with the matter say Tokyo is committed to protecting its commercial ties with Beijing, which accounts for roughly 20% of Japan's total trade. Any US attempt to force a binary choice? That's a non-starter.
The contrast couldn't be sharper: the US wants allies to band together and pressure China, while Japan is sending envoys to deepen its China ties. This week, Toyota (TM, Financial) greenlit a $2 billion plant in Shanghai, and Japanese leaders hand-delivered a letter from PM Ishiba to Xi Jinping's top brass — emphasizing a shared commitment to open trade and resisting protectionism. Meanwhile, Tokyo is actively lobbying China to resume seafood and beef imports. The message is clear: Japan is playing its own game, and it's not cutting Beijing out of the playbook.
But walking this tightrope isn't without risk. Japan relies heavily on US military protection, and tensions are rising over rare earths, a strategic commodity both powers are now fighting over. China's latest move to restrict rare earth exports has revived memories of past supply shocks — and Tokyo isn't taking chances. It's hedging, diversifying, and diplomatically dodging demands to “pick a side.” Because in today's global chessboard, one wrong move could mean losing both kings — and Japan knows it can't afford that.
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