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WSWS : News
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: Japan
Tensions heighten over Japans endorsement of nationalist
textbook
By James Conachy
20 July 2001
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The Japanese government of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
formally notified the governments of South Korea and China on
July 9 that it had rejected their demands for revisions to a school
history textbook that glorifies and sanitises Japans colonial
invasions in the first half of the 20th century.
Koizumis administration contemptuously declared that
it had no power to act. The Japanese Education Ministry stated:
Under the current textbook screening system, it is up to
the authors to decide what historical facts to include in their
books. We cannot force the inclusions of certain points.
On these grounds, Japanese school children can now be taught
from a textbook that reasserts the wartime militarist ideology
that Japans invasions of the Korean peninsula, China and
South East Asia were justified acts of self-defence that assisted
Asias liberation from European and American domination.
The stated aim of the textbook authors, the History Textbook Reform
Society, is to revive patriotism among youth by omitting from
history instruction any references to Japanese imperialisms
colonial atrocities.
The book downplays the oppression of the Korean and Chinese
people and lauds the economic development of regions under Japanese
colonial rule. It omits reference to the conscription of women
as sex-slavesor comfort womenfor military
brothels. The true dimensions of the 1937 Nanjing Massacre, where
Japanese troops were ordered to murder over 200,000 Chinese soldiers
and civilians, are downplayed. The 1942 Japanese conquest of South
East Asia is referred to as helping to cultivate the ideal
and dream of independence.
The Japanese government decision has provoked outrage in South
Korea, where both the government and civic groups have been conducting
a three-month campaign against the approval of the book.
On the day of the announcement, South Korean President Kim
Dae-jung refused to meet with the general secretaries of Japans
three governing coalition parties who had been sent to Seoul to
report the textbook decision. Hundreds of demonstrators, including
former comfort women, gathered at the Japanese embassy
to deliver over 400,000 petitions addressed to Japanese education
boards calling for the text not to be used.
On July 18, the Korean National Assembly voted unanimously
to place all diplomatic relations with Japan under review. Certain
military exchanges have already been suspended and a complete
ban on Japanese popular culture imports into Korea is likely.
There are also calls for South Korea to cancel its joint-hosting
with Japan of this years World Cup football series.
In addition, 80 civic groups are campaigning for a consumer
boycott of all Japanese goods. Schools, universities and sporting
groups have cancelled exchange projects with Japan and written
letters of protest to Japanese sister institutions.
The Chinese government also denounced the Japanese decision.
A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman declared: China cannot
accept the position. We urge the Japanese government to seriously
listen... and to adopt practical steps to ease the tension caused
by the textbook issue.
Nationalist campaigns
Underlying the reaction in South Korea is a deep popular hostility
toward, and fear of, any resurgence of Japanese nationalism. The
Korean people suffered 40 years of brutal repression and exploitation
at the hands of Japanese colonial regimes from 1905 to 1945.
But there is also a substantial element of short-term political
expediency on the part of the South Korean government. By adopting
the mantle of defender of Korean dignity against what is perceived
to be an affront by Japan, the government is calculating it will
be able to both improve its popularity and divert attention away
from the consequences of its economic program.
Over the past three years, Kim Dae-jung has sought to push
through a far-reaching program of corporate restructuring and
austerity, dictated by the International Monetary Fund in exchange
for loans. Unemployment is at record levels, social unrest over
living standards and layoffs is widespread and the governments
support has crumbled. Over the last year, the administration has
unleashed thousands of riot police on a number of occasions to
break up protests, strikes and occupations by workers seeking
to defend their jobs.
The Korean media has joined with the government in actively
stoking nationalist and anti-Japanese sentiment, as have the opposition
parties in order to minimise any political gain Kim Dae-jung may
make. The Korea Times editorialised on July 10 that Korea
had to give a lesson to the self-righteous Japanese.
Joining the demands for diplomatic sanctions and a boycott of
Japanese goods, it declared: The anti-Japanese campaign
should be sustained and bolstered regardless of its actual effect,
as the campaign itself is important for upholding historical justice
and national pride.
It is significant that the Koizumi administration has refused
to back down and has been willing to allow a controversy over
a school textbook to undermine relations with two of Japans
largest trading partners and its closest neighbours.
As in South Korea, there is an element of political diversion.
The administration is formulating a sweeping program of banking
system reform, restructuring and budget austerity in order to
control Japans massive public debt and improve the profitability
of the countrys major corporations. Considerable opposition
is expected to emerge against Koizumi, both from sections of the
ruling class adversely affected by his policies, and from the
working class, which will confront increased unemployment, cutbacks
to welfare and wage reductions.
Koizumi is attempting to cultivate a social base for his agenda,
in advance of its implementation, by stirring up rightwing nationalism.
The endorsement of the textbook is a political gesture aimed at
winning the support for the government through a provocative assertion
of Japans power. The administration no doubt calculates
that for all the protests, China and South Korea will have no
choice in the end but to retain their ties with the regions
largest economy.
The promotion of nationalist sentiment reflects more fundamental
processes, however. It is bound up with the growing economic and
political tensions in Japan and internationally since the end
of the Cold War.
Japanese capitalism is now in its 10th year of economic stagnation.
Attempts to revive the economy by government deficit spending
have failed and sent public debt to unsustainable levels. The
industrial development in Asia has seen corporations based in
South Korea, Taiwan and China emerge as serious competitors. Conflicts
with Russia and China are brewing as both attempt to assert themselves
as North East Asian powers. A series of trade and geo-political
antagonisms fester between Japan and its historic rival, the United
States.
Sections of the ruling elite are calling for a more aggressive
assertion of Japanese interests, particularly in Asia, and the
repudiation of the limits placed on Japans political and
military power following its defeat in World War II. The Koizumi
administration was brought to power with the support of this layer,
which has generally welcomed his stand on the textbook issue as
a means of making clear that Japan will dictate the terms of its
relations with China and South Korea.
The conservative Yomiuri Shimbun hailed the government
for its stance on the textbooks in a July 10 editorial. It declared
it important in that it contributes to creating a more mature
friendship with South Korea and China. A mature friendship
with other countrieswhether on the issue of a textbook,
on trade matters, or in geo-political conflictsis perceived
in Tokyo to be one where its will prevails.
Over the coming months, tensions between Japan and its regional
neighbours are set to rise over the foreign policy agenda being
mapped out by the Koizumi administration.
Koizumi has made clear his desire to remove the pacifist clause
of the Japanese constitutioninserted by the United States
in 1947 to prevent Japan rebuilding a military capable of offensive
operations. Parallel efforts are underway to reinterpret
the constitution as permitting Japanese troops to play active
combat roles in UN operations or alongside US forces in Asia.
The administration is also seeking a permanent seat on the UN
Security Council and pushing toward revisions in the US-Japan
Security alliance that would lead to greater Japanese military
activity in the region.
Koizumis stated intention of worshipping at the Yasukuni
Shrine to Japans war dead on August 15 is likely to trigger
the next furor among Japans neighbours. World War II prime
minister Hideki Tojo and other executed war criminals are interred
at the shrine. Japanese politicians have avoided official worship
in deference to domestic and international opposition to any glorification
of Japans wartime leaders. Both China and South Korea have
threatened diplomatic sanctions if Koizumi ignores their warnings
and visits the shrine.
See Also:
Japanese history textbook
provokes sharp controversy
[7 June 2001]
Koizumi's agenda for Japan:
economic austerity and rightwing nationalism
[22 May 2001]
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