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Japan stokes tensions with China
By John Chan
16 April 2005
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Tensions between Japan and China are continuing to escalate.
Tokyo has harshly criticised Beijings failure to put an
end to anti-Japanese protests, which are set to erupt again this
weekend. After demonstrations last weekend, Japans Foreign
Minister Nobutaka Machimura summoned the Chinese ambassador in
Tokyo to lodge a formal complaint, demanding an apology, stronger
security measures for the Japanese embassy and businesses in China,
and compensation for damage.
Tens of thousands of people took part in demonstrations in
dozens of cities across China last weekend. In Beijing, protesters
gathered outside the Japanese embassy in Beijing, chanted anti-Japanese
slogans and hurled rocks at the building. In Shanghai, two Japanese
students were beaten up. The protests, which began as an Internet
campaign against Japans efforts to gain a seat on the UN
Security Council, were further inflamed by the official Japanese
approval of a history textbook that whitewashes the crimes of
Japanese imperialism in the 1930s and 1940s.
Japans demands have put China in a quandary. Having openly
embraced capitalist relations, the Beijing bureaucracy has increasingly
stirred up nationalist sentiment as a means of creating a social
base for the regime and to divert attention from mounting social
tensions. At the same time, however, China does not want to jeopardise
economic relations with Japan, which is a major investor and trading
partner.
Above all, Beijing fears that any protests will rapidly get
out of its control and become a focus for widespread anger and
discontent against the government over deepening social inequality,
unemployment and poverty. While seeking to rein in the demonstrations,
Chinese leaders cannot afford to appear to be appeasing Japan,
which could trigger a broader movement and destabilise the regime
itself. Beijing has clamped down on websites calling for demonstrations,
and declared that it does not endorse violence. It
has urged people this weekend to attend only officially authorised
protests.
The Japanese government, on the other hand, is deliberately
turning up the heat. In the midst of the first wave of protests,
Japanese authorities gave the green light for the publication
of controversial new history textbooks drawn up by the right-wing
Japanese Society for History Textbook Reform. The avowed aim of
the society is to encourage Japanese nationalism and pride in
Japans wartime liberation of Asia. It dismisses
Japanese wartime atrocities as the product of Western propaganda.
The new history textbooks, for example, deny that Japan deliberately
provoked war with China in July 1937, repeating the absurd pretext
that the full-scale Japanese invasion resulted from an isolated
incident of Chinese guards firing on Japanese troops. The books
also blame China for forcing Japan to intervene and
annex Korea in 1890s and then Manchuria in 1931. References to
Japanese troops exploiting comfort woman or forced
sex slavesmost of them Chinese and Koreanhave been
dropped.
Controversy first erupted over the Japanese Society for History
Textbook Reform in July 2001 when the government of Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi formally rejected demands from South Korea and
China for revisions to the societys books. The society,
which was established in 1997, includes hundreds of political
and business leaders and is sponsored by major corporations such
as Mitsubishi Motors and Isuzu Motors. The recent decision to
authorise new texts in the midst of anti-Japanese protests in
China can only be interpreted as a calculated move to heighten
tensions.
If any further confirmation of Koizumis provocative intentions
were required, it was provided on Wednesday. Tokyo announced that
it had authorised Japanese companies to begin drilling for oil
in an area of the East China Sea that is in dispute between the
two countries. Having refrained from taking such a step for years,
the move in the midst of the current crisis has only hardened
Beijings position. China lodged a formal protest and declared
that it retains the right to take further action over
the drilling. Both countries are major importers of oil and gas
and thus rivals for supplies.
China, which holds a permanent UN Security Council seat and
thus a veto, has taken a tougher stance on Japans membership
of the body. Speaking on Tuesday, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao declared
that Japan had to face up to its wartime history.
Only a country that respects history, takes responsibility
for history and wins over the trust of peoples in Asia and the
world at large can take greater responsibilities in the international
community, he said.
Japanese nationalism
Japanese politicians have blamed Beijing for the tensions and
accused it of stirring up nationalism. Speaking on the television
program Sunday Project, Shinzo Abe, acting secretary
general of Japans ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP),
declared that deepening social inequality was behind the anti-Japanese
protests. Beijing, he claimed, was using Japan as an outlet
to vent that anger. While the Chinese bureaucracy certainly
encourages nationalism for that purpose, the same is true of the
Japanese government.
Prime Minister Koizumi, in particular, has pursued a political
strategy of whipping up right-wing nationalism both to divert
social discontent and to pursue the ambitions of sections of the
Japanese ruling class to rearm and to take a more aggressive stance
within the Asian Pacific region. Shortly after coming to power
in 2001, Koizumi provoked the initial controversy over the textbooks
and then pointedly visited the Yasakuni shrine where convicted
Japanese war criminals are interred.
After more than a decade of economic stagnation, unemployment
in Japan is at record levels, the guarantee of life-long employment
is disappearing and social inequality is growing. These shifts
have produced deep-going social tensions and widespread alienation
from the entire political establishment, reflected in plunging
voter turnouts for elections. Koizumi is seeking to fashion a
social base for the LDP by promoting a revival of Japanese nationalism
and militarism.
At the same time, Koizumi has sought to circumvent the so-called
pacifist clause in Japans post-World War II constitution
that limits Japans military to the countrys immediate
defence. The key factor in enabling him to do so has been the
backing of the Bush administration, which has encouraged Japan
to change its constitution, to build up its military and to take
a more active role in North East Asiaagainst
China in particular.
Despite overwhelming popular opposition in Japan, Koizumi committed
troops to the US occupation of Iraqboth to cement ties with
Washington and as a precedent for the dispatch of Japanese military
forces to other active war zones. With the backing of Washington,
Japan has pursued an aggressive policy in North East Asia.
Last November, Tokyo responded to the intrusion of a Chinese
submarine into Japanese waters by dispatching warships to chase
the vessel and by stirring up an outcry against China. In December,
a National Defence Program Outline identified China for the first
time as Japans largest security concern in the next decade.
In a joint statement with the US in mid-February, Japan, again
for the first time, openly referred to Taiwan as a mutual security
concerna move that potentially commits Japan to join the
US in backing Taiwan in a war with China.
Significantly, in the current crisis the Bush administration
has lined up behind Koizumi. White House spokesman Richard Boucher
declared on Tuesday: China does have a responsibility to
prevent violence against foreign missions in Beijing. We think
that its very regrettable that this one did turn violent;
it was not under control. As well as underscoring the hypocrisy
of Washingtons ritual calls for freedom of expression
in China, the statement will only encourage Koizumi to take tougher
measures. His decision to give the green light for drilling in
the East China Sea came the following day.
Corporate nervousness in Japan
Within Japan, Koizumi is exploiting the crisis to the hilt
to quell opposition to his policies. Posturing as the defender
of Japanese citizens, he demanded on Tuesday that China take responsibility
in securing Japanese free activity in China. We need this to be
fully acknowledged by China. LDP secretary general Tsutomu
Takebe went one step further, denouncing the Chinese demonstrations
on Sunday as almost equal to attacking Japan.
At the same time, there is a distinct nervousness in ruling
circles in Tokyo over the potential economic fall-out from the
confrontation. Japans recent limited recovery
has been based on exports to China and the increased exploitation
of cheap Chinese labour. The Nikkei share market index has already
fallen sharply, with corporations and banks with investments in
China hit especially hard.
Takeo Fukui, chief executive of the auto giant Honda, told
a press conference: We are worried. We want to stay low-key
at this sensitive time, and we want to reduce the number of overseas
trips [to China]. Local Japanese executives have been instructed
to be careful and to avoid addressing Chinese workers as baka
or stupid, a wartime insult used by Japanese troops. Japanese
companies are notorious for their physical abuse of workers in
China as well as low wages and poor conditions.
These concerns are reflected in liberal sections
of the Japanese press, which have reservations about Koizumis
right-wing nationalism. An editorial yesterday in the Asahi
Shimbun, for instance, called for cool heads over
drilling in the East China Sea and efforts to build a mature
relationship from which everyone can benefit. Earlier in
the week, the newspaper opposed the official endorsement of the
new history textbooks. At the same time, however, the newspaper
has declared that the Chinese government must not tolerate
such violent demonstrations.
The Asahi Shimbuns concession to anti-Chinese
sentiment underlines the degree to which the entire political
establishment has lined up behind Koizumi. Significantly, the
opposition Democratic Party of Japan is also falling in behind
Koizumis campaign, with its deputy leader Ichiro Ozawa declaring:
Its unforgivable that the Chinese government gave
demonstrators silent approval.
It is yet to be seen to what extent this nationalist campaign
will be successful. Large sections of the population, particularly
young people, are antagonistic not just to the government, but
all political parties. Moreover there is a deeply rooted hostility
to attempts to revive Japanese militarism as demonstrated by the
widespread opposition to the dispatch of Japanese troops to Iraq
and efforts to revive the ideology and symbols of Japans
wartime imperial regime.
In ruling circles internationally, there are fears that the
tensions in North East Asia could lead to a political collapse
in China, open conflict between the two countries, or both.
Referring to the precedent of the May 4 movement in 1919, when
anti-Japanese protests turned on a corrupt Chinese government,
the Financial Times warned: That pattern has persisted
to this day. And so has the explosive mixture in Chinese rebellions
of xenophobia and anti-government protests... It is often forgotten
that student protests in China in the 1980s, culminating in Tiananmen
Square in 1989, also began with riots against foreign students
and Japanese militarism.
Even as the latest anti-Japanese demonstrations erupted
in Beijing and Shanghai, tens of thousands of villagers began
rioting in Zhejiang province [last Sunday], protesting against
miserable economic and environmental conditions. Anti-Japanese
demonstrations spilled over to Hong Kong this week and many more
are being planned for this weekend in at least 10 Chinese cities.
Chinese websites are buzzing with angry rhetoric. And the anniversary
of the May 4 Movement is looming, the newspaper noted.
While most of the media has focussed on the implications of
Chinese nationalism, the Los Angeles Times, in a comment
entitled Japans revisionist history, warned
of the dangers of Japanese militarism. The ultimate consequence
of whitewashing the past could be the demise of Japans admirable
Peace Constitution, allowing Japan to retool its formidable industrial
base into a weapon industry threatening its neighbors and possibly
triggering an unprecedented arms race and another world war,
it stated.
The potential for a military clash between the two countries
over the disputed area of the East China Sea cannot be ruled out.
In an editorial yesterday condemning China for violating
norms of international relations over the maritime disagreement,
the conservative Yomuiri Shimbun condemned previous governments
for their ostrich policy on issues concerning Japans
giant neighbour. It concluded by urging the government to
take every possible measure to protect ships digging experimental
wells and to pass legislation to deploy Japanese naval vessels
to do so.
See Also:
Anti-Japanese protests erupt in China
[8 April 2005]
US-Japan security statement
heightens tensions with China
[1 March 2005]
Japan outbids China for Siberian
pipeline
[14 February 2005]
Japan uses submarine
incident to whip up anti-Chinese nationalism
[29 November 2004]
Japanese parliament
gives green light for troops to Iraq
[8 August 2004]
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