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  • In June 2015, Japan’s Navy conducted a series of drills near a disputed island in the South

  • China Sea. The drills increased longstanding tensions between China and Japan, which are

  • the second and third largest world economies, respectively. As the battle over the South

  • China Sea continues to intensify, we wanted to know: what would happen if China and Japan

  • went to war?

  • The source of their strained relation comes from their mutual, then divided history. Much

  • of Japanese culture originated in China, and for many centuries they were close allies.

  • However, around the 1850s, the US established a trade relationship with Japan, allowing

  • it to modernize along Western ideals. As European forces had repeatedly beaten Chinese military

  • forces during the Opium Wars, Japan began to view its neighbors as weaker and outmoded.

  • In the early 20th century, the Japanese committed a number of war crimes against China for which

  • they have taken limited responsibility. This divide between East and West began a long

  • separation of ideals and allegiances for the two countries.

  • A 2014 BBC poll found that 73% of Japanese people, and 90% of Chinese people have negative

  • views of each other, meaning that they dislike each other more than any OTHER country dislikes

  • either of them.

  • So, who would win in a war? Well, in purely material terms, China is ranked as the third

  • most powerful military in the world, while Japan is ranked 9th. China has about 4.6 million

  • active and reserve personnel, against Japan’s roughly 300,000. Additionally, as the war

  • would most likely play out in the South China Sea, China’s Navy is about six times as

  • strong as Japan’s. However, Japan would most likely be supported by NATO as a major

  • non-NATO ally. And even if most of NATO refused, Japan has a direct mutual defense treaty with

  • the United States. This would dramatically shift the balance of power to Japan’s side.

  • Finally, Japan’s constitution ensures that their military is exclusively restricted to

  • self-defense. However in recent years Japan has been shying away from a defense-only military

  • policy. Japan’s military is also more technologically advanced than China’s, and would likely

  • be able to hold off an attack.

  • Luckily, despite recent tension, relations between the two countries have seen a general

  • trend upwards. In a 2010 joint report, China and Japan came to the consensus that Japanese

  • aggression was responsible for the Sino-Japanese war, significantly easing tensions over the

  • matter. Additionally, the two countries are among each other’s largest trade partners.

  • Since both powerful economies rely directly on each other, the chances of ruining that

  • with an ideological war are so slim that theyre nearly nonexistent. The flaring of tensions

  • over island territory are more likely to lead to political maneuvering and diplomacy rather

  • than outright war.

  • Want to know more about the last war between Japan and China? Check out our video here.

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In June 2015, Japan’s Navy conducted a series of drills near a disputed island in the South

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