Abe says Japan won’t 'tolerate' China's island challenge

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe vowed on Saturday that he would not “tolerate” any challenge to control over contested islands - after China’s growing incursions into the area.
“We simply cannot tolerate any challenge now and in the future. No nation should make any miscalculation or underestimate the firmness of our resolve,” Abe said, in reference to recent tensions over the Diaoyu Islands, which are known as the Senkakus in Japan.
Japan's recently elected prime minister made the comments at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
US President Barack Obama also pledged with Abe to take a firm line on a defiant North Korea as the two sides tried to calm rising tensions between Tokyo and China.
Abe carefully avoided disagreements with Obama after previous Japanese governments’ rifts and declared: “The alliance between Japan and the United States is back now. It’s completely back.”