This is pretty straightforward, isn't it? The Chinese Embassy in Japan released a blue background and white text poster yesterday (December 9th), which stated in Japanese: "Any force that dares to hinder China's unification cause will be like a mantis trying to block a cart, and will face a firm counterattack, ending in complete failure."
(The above content is translated by software. Please be familiar with this.)
Eastern Times Comment: Please pay attention to the time. Is there an inevitable connection between the post of our embassy and some new events on the same day?
Let's first look at this incident:
On December 9th, regarding the incident of military aircraft radar being illuminated, Defense Minister Shintarō Ishihara made two actions.
One was, despite our clear prior notification, he continued to hype up the F-15 military aircraft being illuminated incident.
Please note the key point: He told the Japanese legislators in the National Diet, "we did not receive prior notice," was this really the case?
As many of you may have seen, Yuyuantan Tian disclosed the details of the incident that day, and also released the audio recording of the Japanese ship receiving the radio notification.
This changed the nature of the incident, from the Japanese aircraft causing trouble, showing a "professional extortion" hype, into fabricating facts and packaging "victims" as provocation.
This kind of provocation, in my opinion, is not only political but also military.
This means that Takahashi not only does not intend to retract his erroneous statements, but is going further and further...
I think, under such circumstances, our embassy issued its first poster only in Japanese, which is a very direct warning, making them give up unrealistic ideas.
As an individual, I thought of the line from "The Peach Blossom Fan": "Watching him build a mansion, watching him host guests, watching him see the mansion collapse."
Perhaps letting them perform their own script would also be a way to solve the problem, don't you think?
Original: toutiao.com/article/1851089514200076/
Statement: This article represents the personal views of the author.