China-Japan goodwill summit contends with rifts
By Chris Buckley
TOKYO (Reuters) - Chinese President Hu Jintao vows his five-day visit to Japan from Tuesday will help heal tension through a "warm spring" of goodwill, as the two nations try to bridge rifts over energy resources and security.
He will also be keen to portray his country as a friendly neighbor after years of feuding over Japan's handling of its wartime aggression.
Hu's longest state visit comes as China seeks to calm international protest over its human rights record, particularly over Tibet. The criticism has threatened to overshadow Beijing's bid to use the 2008 Olympics to showcase China as a prosperous and harmonious power.
"I sincerely wish for an ever-lasting warm spring of friendship between the people of China and of Japan," Hu told Japanese reporters in Beijing on Sunday.
China replaced the United States as Japan's top trade partner last year, with two-way trade worth $236.6 billion, up 12 percent from 2006.
With no news as to whether Hu would engage in any panda diplomacy -- offering one of the rare bears as a goodwill gift -- the political climax of the visit is still set to be a summit on Wednesday with Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda.
They hope to unveil a joint blueprint for managing ties in coming years, when China's economy is likely to rival Japan's in size.
However, haggling over the draft of the document continues and it remains unclear whether the avowals of friendship will narrow real disagreements over gas fields, Taiwan and military modernization, or merely bathe them in warm words.
A Japanese Foreign Ministry official said both governments had to deal with citizens wary of the other nation's intentions.
"The people's sentiment in both countries is still fragile, so we have to improve people's feeling through this visit," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
There is certainly much at stake in closer relations for both countries, and for the rest of the world.
TRILLIONS
Japan is the world's second biggest economy, at $4.3 trillion in 2006, and China is the fourth biggest, worth $2.7 trillion and growing quickly.
While China's fast growth offers market opportunities, Beijing's accompanying expansion in diplomatic and military reach has brought broader anxieties in Japan.
"Distrust persists in the political and security spheres," Men Honghua, a strategist at a Chinese Communist Party thinktank, wrote in a party newspaper, the Study Times, on Monday. "Japan worries about China emerging to dominate East Asia." Continued...
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