How Japanâs new prime minister has brought Chinaâs âwolf warriorsâ back out
- - How Japanâs new prime minister has brought Chinaâs âwolf warriorsâ back out
Analysis by Jessie Yeung, CNNNovember 12, 2025 at 1:27 AM
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Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi at a press conference after the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Gyeongju, South Korea on November 1, 2025. - The Asahi Shimbun/Getty Images
In the end, there was no honeymoon period.
Just two weeks ago, Japanâs new prime minister Sanae Takaichi was shaking hands with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Now, relations between the two Asian nations have dramatically soured, with escalating nationalist rhetoric in China and even an apparent threat of beheading from one of its diplomats.
Takaichi, who was elected as Japanâs first female prime minister just last month, has become embroiled in a growing row with Beijing over Taiwan â the democratic island that Chinaâs ruling Communist Party claims as its own, and a red line it has warned other countries not to cross.
The furor began when Takaichi told the Japanese parliament on November 7 that a Chinese attack on Taiwan â which lies just 60 miles (100 kilometers) from Japanese territory â would count as âa situation threatening Japanâs survivalâ and could trigger a military response from Tokyo.
Beijing has not ruled out using force to take control of the island and has ramped up the frequency and complexity of its military drills around Taiwan in recent years.
Previous Japanese leaders have avoided discussing Taiwan in the context of a military response. And Washington deliberately remains vague on how it would respond to a hypothetical invasion, a policy known as âstrategic ambiguity.â
Wading into the thorny issue of Taiwanâs defense has gotten other world leaders in hot water with Beijing before. Former US President Joe Biden set off a diplomatic panic during his time in office when he said multiple times that the United States would be willing to intervene militarily if China attacked Taiwan â forcing the White House to repeatedly walk back his comments, and sparking anger each time in Beijing.
Takaichiâs remarks were met with an even more vehement response.
âThe dirty neck that sticks itself in must be cut off,â wrote the Chinese consul general in Osaka, Xue Jian, in a post on X that has since been deleted.
The fallout has spiraled since, with Japan criticizing Xueâs âextremely inappropriateâ post and Taiwan voicing concern about Xueâs âthreateningâ remarks, according to Reuters.
Beijing, meanwhile, has defended its position and Xueâs comments.
A spokesperson from Chinaâs foreign ministry on Monday accused Japan of âgrossly interfering with Chinaâs internal affairs,â saying Xueâs post was simply responding to Takaichiâs âerroneous and dangerous remarks.â
For some, the controversy harks back to Chinaâs âwolf warriorâ diplomacy â an aggressive style of foreign policy that emerged in the early 2020s, which often saw Chinese officials take to social media platforms to hit back directly - and often colorfully - at any criticism of China, but has since been dialed back as Beijing looked to win back lost goodwill among Western nations.
And within China, where there is already significant streak of anti-Japanese sentiment, state media and other prominent voices this week have further fanned outrage over Takaichiâs statement.
Communist Party mouthpiece Peopleâs Daily condemned Takaichi as ârecklessly shooting her mouth off,â and warning: âNo one should harbor any illusion that they can cross the line on the Taiwan issue without paying a price.â
A social media account affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV asked: âHas her head been kicked by a donkey?â
Hu Xijin, a Chinese pundit and former editor-in-chief of the state-run tabloid Global Times, offered a more violent warning, echoing the threats from the diplomat Xue.
âChinaâs battle blade for beheading invaders has been sharpened to a very keen edge,â he wrote in a post on Tuesday. âIf Japanese militarism wishes to come to the Taiwan Strait to sacrifice themselves on our blades, we will fulfill them.â
A tangled relationship
Takaichi shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping ahead of their talk in Gyeongju, South Korea, on October 31, 2025. - Kyodo/Reuters
Takaichi said Monday that her comments were âhypothetical,â and said she would avoid making similar comments in parliament again. But the prime minister is walking a tightrope every Japanese leader has had to balance.
China remains Japanâs largest trading partner, and Takaichi inherited a country facing mounting economic woes. At the same time, Takaichi is known for her hardline conservative views, like her mentor former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. She has pushed to strengthen Japanâs defense capacity and criticized Beijingâs growing military presence in the region.
This uneasy relationship was on display when Takaichi met Xi at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in late October. The two leaders agreed to build a âstrategic mutually beneficial relationship,â Takaichi said afterward; however, she also raised with Xi the hot-button issue of Chinaâs activity in the East China Sea, including around islands claimed by both countries.
Even before she took office, Takaichiâs stance on Taiwan was clear. She visited the island earlier this year and called for cooperation on âdefense challenges,â which Beijing condemned at the time. During the APEC summit, she also met with Taiwanâs representative, again angering China.
The current spat comes during a year when Japan-China relations are already strained, in part because of Tokyoâs colonial and war-time past.
September marked the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, which Beijing commemorated with a massive military parade. Thereâs longstanding historical hostility between the two countries; China was a crucial Allied partner, fighting against Japanâs full-scale invasion that ended only with Tokyoâs formal surrender in 1945.
The scars of that era run deep. Japanese Imperial troops killed more than 200,000 unarmed men and civilians, and raped and tortured tens of thousands of women and girls, in what is known as the Nanjing Massacre â one of the most notorious wartime atrocities of the 20th century.
Chinese military personnel march during a rehearsal ahead of a military parade marking the 80th anniversary of the end of WIII in Beijing on September 3, 2025. - Tingshu Wang/Reuters
Ahead of the parade, Chinese officials ramped up their rhetoric and accused Japan of whitewashing history. Adding fuel to the fire, China also released at least four WWII films this year, including some that depict the Nanjing Massacre and the sinking of a Japanese vessel.
Fearing a spike in anti-Japanese sentiment ahead of the parade, the Japanese embassy in Beijing warned its citizens to stay cautious and avoid speaking Japanese loudly in public â perhaps mindful that in recent years, there has been a spate of violent attacks against Japanese nationals in China.
That complex history involves Taiwan, too.
The island was once a Japanese colony that Imperial China had ceded to Imperial Japan. After Japan was defeated in WWII, Chinaâs ruling Nationalists took control of Taiwan â then, several years later, fled to the island and moved their seat of government there after losing a bloody civil war to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
Today, the CCP views the self-ruling island as its own territory, despite never having controlled it, and has vowed to seize it by force if necessary. Party leaders and state media have repeatedly claimed that the end of WWII marked the islandâs return to Chinese rule and liberation from Japanese occupation â a view Chinese officials alluded to this week as they berated Takaichi.
âJapan holds historical responsibility towards the Chinese people regarding the Taiwan issue, having committed unmentionable crimes during the 50 years of colonial rule over Taiwan,â said Chen Binhua, a spokesperson for Chinaâs Taiwan Affairs Office, on Wednesday when asked about Takaichiâs comments.
âEighty years ago, we defeated the Japanese aggressors, restored Taiwan, and ended their occupation and plunder,â he said.
âShould anyone again attempt to challenge Chinaâs core interestsâ or thwart reunification with Taiwan, Chen said, âwill never accept or tolerate it.â
CNNâs Hanako Montgomery contributed to this report.
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