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Koizumis visit to North Korea: a first for Japanese
imperialism
By James Conachy
11 September 2002
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Junichiro Koizumi is due to make the first ever trip by a Japanese
Prime Minister to Pyongyang, where he will hold a one-day summit
on September 17 with North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il. The Japanese
media has hailed the visit as something of a political coup. With
the backing of the Bush administration, it appears that Tokyo,
rather than Washington, will now take a leading role in pressing
their mutual demands on the North Korea regime.
Informal contact is believed to have taken place for over a
year between North Korean officials and former Japanese prime
minister Yoshiro Morione of Koizumis closest factional
allies within Japans ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).
By late August, a tentative agreement had been reached and Koizumi
publicly declared his desire for talks with Kim Jong-Il. A formal
invitation was extended by North Korea and accepted by Tokyo on
August 30, after prior talks with the United States, South Korea,
China and Russia.
Statements in the US indicate that the White House has been
fully briefed at every stage of the Japanese governments
decision-making and is confident that Koizumi will represent its
interests. The Bush administration welcomed the visit, saying
it had no need to send its own diplomatic mission to Pyongyang
until it assessed the outcome of the negotiations with Japan.
An unnamed US official told the Yomiuri Shimbun: Japan
knows very well the matters that Washington is concerned about,
so the Tokyo-Pyongyang summit meeting should reflect US concerns.
Koizumi arrived in the US yesterday to take part in the commemorations
of last years terror attacks, and immediately entered into
discussions over Iraq, Korea and economic issues.
The North Korean regimes motives in seeking the summit
with Koizumi are transparent. It is making a desperate gamble
that the talks with Japan will facilitate negotiations with the
US and ease the countrys economic and political isolation.
Earlier in the year, Bush branded North Korea, along with Iraq
and Iran, as a part of an axis of evil and has been
steadily increasing its belligerent rhetoric against Pyongyang.
Just days before the announcement of Koizumis visit, Undersecretary
of State John Bolton declared in South Korea: In addition
to its disturbing weapons of mass destruction activities, North
Korea also is the worlds foremost peddler of ballistic missile-related
equipment, components, materials and technical expertise.
Washingtons aggressive stance against North Korea, including
the possibility of US military strikes against alleged weapons
facilities, has effectively sabotaged South Koreas Sunshine
Policy to open up the North Korean economy and make the
Korean peninsula a hub for economic activity between Europe and
East Asia. Plans for railway links, gas pipelines and industrial
export zones have stalled.
North Korea is on the brink of economic and social disintegration.
According to most analysts, less than 30 percent of industry is
functioning and one third of the population rely on international
food aid to avoid starvation. This disastrous state is the outcome
of the reactionary and autarkic policies of the Stalinist regime
in Pyongyang, combined with the isolation and pressure maintained
by Washington since the Korean War of 1950-53. In the decade since
collapse of the Soviet UnionNorth Korea's chief sponsor
and financierthe US has stepped up its provocations.
Successive allegations have been used to justify economic sanctions,
deny aid, block a political settlement between the North and the
South and keep the peninsula in a state of military alert and
fear. Every attempt by Pyongyang to accommodate to Washingtons
demands has been met by new ultimatums. In 1994, the US accused
North Korea of using its two nuclear power plants to gather weapons-grade
plutonium. Pyongyang agreed to close them down and allowed International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors into the country, who found
no evidence of a nuclear weapons program. The major powers have
reneged on their side of the agreement, however, which was to
construct two replacement light-water nuclear plants by 2003.
Construction did not even begin until this year and is not due
to be finished until at least 2009.
In 1998, the Clinton administration declared that North Korea
was developing missiles capable of striking Japan and the US West
Coast. Faced with US ultimatums, North Korea again backed down
and suspended work on its longest-range missile until 2003. Following
a review of US policy towards North Korea, the Bush administration
ratchetted up the pressure, with fresh accusations that North
Korea was constructing weapons of mass destruction.
Koizumi to pressure Pyongyang
Koizumis agenda in Pyongyang leaves no reason to believe
that the talks represent any departure from the decade-long policy
of isolating North Korea. What is significant is that for the
first time Washington appears to be permitting Tokyo to play a
larger diplomatic and potentially military role in East Asia by
aggressively pursuing the Pyongyang regime.
At the top of the list are demands that North Korea permanently
suspend its long-range missile program and once again allow IAEA
inspectors into its former nuclear facilities. Any refusal to
do so will be seized on immediately in Washington and Tokyo as
evidence that their accusations against North Korea are legitimate
and, if need be, as a pretext for military confrontation. A Japanese
Korean affairs commentator, Masao Okonogi, warned in the Chinese
Peoples Daily that if the September 17 summit ended with
no visible progress, then Japan will join with the US to
contain the DPRK (North Korea). The DPRK will face higher risks.
Even if Pyongyang does agree to these demands, new ones are
sure to follow. As in the case of Iraq, North Korea faces the
impossible task of proving that nowhere on its territory does
it have the potential to develop weapons of mass destruction.
Layers of the US and Japanese ruling classes have been determined
to bring about the collapse of the North Korean regime since the
end of the Cold War. Whatever concessions Pyongyang makes, the
administrations in Washington and Tokyo regard it as an obstacle
to their ambitions for domination over the markets and resources
of North East Asia, particularly in China and the Russian Far
East. An aggressive stance will also undermine efforts by the
European powers to open up diplomatic and economic relations in
North Korea as part of their wider thrust into the region.
The clearest signal that Koizumis visit will not lead
to a lessening of tensions is the prominence being given to longstanding
but unsubstantiated allegations that North Korean agents kidnapped
at least 11 Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s. The Japanese
political establishment is insisting that Koizumi put pressure
on North Korea to resolve the issue.
Initially confined to Japans ultra right-wing fringe,
the accusation was taken up by the Japanese government in 1997,
after a North Korean defector claimed to have details of the abductions.
According to the defector, the 11 were taken for the purpose of
training North Korean spies in Japanese language and culture.
Despite an absence of credible evidence, North Koreas refusal
in 1998 to investigate the defectors allegation became the
basis for the Japanese government calling off talks over the establishment
of diplomatic relations with Pyongyang. Unofficial talks also
broke down in October 2000.
Bizarre as the allegations appear, the Japanese ruling elite
has important ideological issues at stake. After 1945, Japanese
imperialism was compelled to accept responsibility for the Pacific
war and, outwardly at least, adopt a stance of contrition and
humility. Japan is still labelled a former enemy in the United
Nations charter and its constitution prohibits the country from
using force to settle international disputes. To re-establish
relations with its former colonies of South Korea and China, Japan
had to issue apologies and compensation.
The extreme right gave voice to the continuing resentment in
ruling circles over this legacy of Japans defeat in World
War II. According to their propaganda, Japan was rendered so impotent
by the terms of its wartime surrender that even North Korea felt
confident to intrude into Japanese territory and kidnap its citizens
with impunity.
The fact that the Koizumi government has adopted the issue
is a clear sign that the ruling class is determined to end its
post-war posture and more aggressively pursue its interests, particularly
in North East Asia. The abductions have already been used to justify
bellicose actions by the Japanese military. Last December, the
Japanese Coast Guard sunk an unidentified ship, claiming it was
a North Korean spy ship.
The allegations have also become a means of stoking up Japanese
nationalism and harnessing public support for a confrontational
policy against North Korea. The campaign has had such an impact
that 48 percent of Japanese named the abductions as the highest
priority issue between Japan and North Koreafar outranking
weapons of mass destruction. One LDP politician went
as far as to declare he would only consider Koizumis trip
a success when he comes back to Japan from Pyongyang with
the 11 abductees on his chartered plane.
Koizumis staff have foreshadowed that he will give some
type of apology to North Korea for the damage and suffering
inflicted on the Korean people during Japans rule of the
peninsulasimilar to one he gave to South Korea last year.
But the reestablishment of diplomatic ties and any Japanese compensation
will be predicated on Pyongyang kowtowing to Tokyo over the abduction
charges and pledging to cease its alleged violations of Japanese
sovereignty.
As with weapons of mass destruction, the abduction
issue puts the North Korean regime into an impossible situation.
If Pyongyang continues to maintain that the charges are fabrications,
Koizumi is likely to reject diplomatic relations and adopt a more
aggressive stance towards North Korea. If it admits in any way
to the charges, North Korea faces an inexhaustible series of demandsfrom
calls for apologies and compensation to demands for the return
of Japanese citizens and investigations into other alleged victims.
The logical conclusion was spelt out by right-wing Tokyo governor
Shintaro Ishihara in April, when he asserted Japan should declare
war on North Korea over the issue.
Whatever the immediate outcome of Koizumis visit, it
is part of a bid by Japan to reassert itself as a political and
military power, adding a new and explosive element to an already
volatile situation in the Asia Pacific region.
See Also:
US seeks Japanese government support
for war on Iraq
[3 September 2002]
Noose tightens around North
Korea following Yellow Sea naval battle
[11 July 2002]
US-backed groups push North
Korean asylum bids in China
[24 June 2002]
War danger grows on Korean
peninsula
[27 March 2002]
Bush visit to Japan cements
closer ties against China
[1 March 2002]
Bushs evil axis
speech destabilises the Korean peninsula
[15 February 2002]
The Nobel Peace Prize
and Koreas Kim Dae-jung
[3 November 2000]
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