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Japan: Koizumis provocative visit to the Yasukuni shrine
By John Chan
24 August 2006
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In one of his final acts before leaving office next month,
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi paid a sixth visit last
week to the controversial Yasukuni Shrine where Japans war
dead, including convicted war criminals, are worshipped. Particularly
significant was the date of Koizumis visitAugust 15
was the day on which Japan formally surrendered to US forces in
1945.
Koizumis determination to make the trip to the Shinto
religious shrine on that date, despite repeated protests by China
and South Korea, was designed to send a message: Japan is no longer
prepared to be restrained by its defeat in World War II nor apologetic
for the terrible crimes committed by Japanese imperialism in the
1930s and 1940s. More than any of his postwar predecessors, Koizumi
is responsible for reviving the countrys militarist traditions
and aggressively reasserting Japans interests in North East
Asia.
The Yasukuni Shrine has long been a symbol of Japanese nationalism
and militarism. Its associated history museum falsifies Japans
wartime conquests as liberating Asia from Western
powers and whitewashes Japanese military atrocities. It proudly
displays a Mitsubishi Zero aircraft used in the invasion
of China. Japans dream of building a Great East Asia
was necessitated by history and it was sought after by the countries
of Asia, the shrine declares on its website.
Koizumi was the first prime minister to visit the Yasukuni
Shrine on August 15 since Yasuhiro Nakasone in 1985. Nakasones
visit provoked such strong protests from Japans neighbours
that it was also his last. It took another decade for Prime Minister
Ryutaro Hashimoto to make his only trip to the shrine in July
1996. Before becoming prime minister in 2001, Koizumi pledged
to visit the shrine on August 15 but backed away, under domestic
and international pressure, making a trip annually on less sensitive
dates.
Every aspect of the latest visit was contrived to blunt criticism,
while encouraging right-wing nationalists. Koizumi claimed he
was making the trip as an individual who happened to be prime
minister, yet deliberately signed the guest book as Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi. Unlike previous years, he prayed
in the main building itself, thus more formally paying homage
to the war dead. He denied glorifying wartime militarism and brushed
aside adverse comment about the date by declaring: I have
always been criticised and opposed, even when I avoided (visiting
Yasukuni) on August 15.
The message was not lost on the hundreds of right-wing activists
who gather annually at the shrine on August 15. Among them was
Yuko Tojothe granddaughter of wartime Prime Minister Hideki
Tojowho was tried and executed as a war criminal by a US-led
tribunal in 1948. I thank Prime Minister Koizumi from the
bottom of my heart for todays visit, since he put away other
countries interference in domestic affairs, she declared.
Others were dressed in wartime military uniforms bearing the
imperial Chrysanthemum badge. They shouted Long live the
Emperor!, waved the wartime flag and sang the national anthem
as nearby sound trucks blared out military marches. Shinichi Kamijo
told the Japan Times that he was there to patrol
the environs outside Yasukuni for leftwingers. He said the
more Chinese and South Koreans protested, the more often the prime
minister should come. Another 56 Japanese MPs visited the shrine
later in the day.
The visit did not go unopposeda reflection of the deep-seated
hostility in Japan to militarism. A busload of protestors attempted
to enter the shrines grounds but they were barred by police.
A group of 300 protesters gathered in Tokyos Sakamotocho
Park. Another 300 assembled near the shrine. Professor Koichi
Yokota, a speaker at the protest, accused Koizumi of violating
the constitutions separation of the state and religion.
Koizumis visit provoked strong opposition in the region.
A Chinese spokesperson declared that it challenges international
justice and tramples on the conscience of mankind. South
Korea said the Yasukuni visit strained South Korea-Japan
relations and damaged cooperative ties in North East Asia.
Taiwan called on Tokyo to face the past squarely.
Singapore said it was not helpful for cooperation in East
Asia. Even Russia warned that the visit and Japans
wartime history were extremely delicate subjects.
While many people recollect Japans wartime atrocities
and legitimately fear a revival of Japanese militarism, Beijing
and Seoul are exploiting these sentiments to divert from social
tensions at home. Last year the Chinese government encouraged
anti-Japanese protests by layers of middle-class youth, leading
to racist attacks on innocent Japanese visitors. On August 15,
dozens of anti-Japanese activists were allowed to protest outside
the Japanese embassy in Beijing.
Militarist agenda
Powerful sections of the Japanese ruling class have been pressing
for a more aggressive assertion of national economic and strategic
interests since the early 1990s. But the countrys armed
forces were constrained by the so-called pacifist clause in the
post-war constitution that effectively blocked the development
of an offensive military capacity and the deployment of Japanese
troops overseas. The limitations on the Japanese military became
embarrassingly apparent during the 1990-91 Persian Gulf WarTokyo
was unable to contribute troops to the US-led force but was forced
to pay a large portion of the costs.
Posturing as a reformist opposed to the political
establishment, Koizumi succeeded where a long string of prime
ministers failed. As well as consciously breaking the post-war
restraints on Japanese foreign policy, he pushed ahead with an
agenda of far reaching economic restructuring. He made a deliberate
appeal to disaffected young people by combining an unconventional
image with nationalist appeals to build a new Japan
that would not apologise to China and Korea over its wartime record.
The Bush administrations war on terrorism
proved a political boon to Koizumi. Following September 11, he
sacked his popular foreign minister, Makiko Tanaka, who was critical
of the US and advocated a more independent Japanese foreign policy,
including closer ties with China. Koizumi strengthened Japans
alliance with Washington, calculating that the war on terrorism
would enable his government to undermine the constitutional restraints
on the Japanese military.
In 2001, Koizumi established a precedent by sending Japanese
warships to the Indian Ocean to support the US-led invasion of
Afghanistan. In 2004, Koizumi defied overwhelming popular opposition
to send troops to support the US-led occupation of Iraqthe
first time that Japanese soldiers had been sent to a foreign combat
zone since 1945. Following last months missile test by North
Korea, Japan, rather than the US, took the lead in pressing for
a punitive resolution in the UN Security Council. Inside Japan,
senior government figures argued that Japan had to have offensive
military capabilities for a pre-emptive strike against
North Korea.
Encouraged by the Bush administration to take a more aggressive
role in North East Asia, particularly against China, the Koizumi
government has provoked a series of territorial disputes, not
only with Beijing, but also with Russia, South Korea and Taiwan.
Koizumis visits to the Yasukuni shrine and his governments
approval of controversial history texts whitewashing Japans
wartime role have only compounded regional tensions.
Within Japan, sections of the business elite are concerned
that Koizumi has damaged their commercial interests. Finance Minister
Sadakazu Tanigakia contender to replace Koizumi next monthissued
a statement saying, a prime minister should avoid actions
that worsen relations with China and South Korea and lower
Japans standing in Asia.
The frontrunner as the next prime minister is, however, Cabinet
Secretary Shinzo Abe, a right-wing nationalist who openly defended
the shrine visit. At a press conference last week, he praised
Koizumi for explaining the reasons in a very easy-to-understand
way. Abes grandfather, Nobusuke Kishi, became prime
minister in 1957 despite allegations of his involvement in war
crimes. Abe has been a frequent visitor to the Yasukuni shrine.
The debate over the shrine visits also reflects concerns about
popular opposition. An editorial in Asahi Shimbun on August
17 warned that the visit was a serious political mistake
that deeply divided the nation. Is he totally unaware of
the growing domestic opposition to his Yasukuni visits?
the newspaper exclaimed.
In an Asahi Shimbun poll in July, 57 percent of
respondents expressed opposition to Koizumis shrine visits.
The figure was double that of the people who supported the visits.
Most national and local newspapers are also at odds with Koizumi.
Even within his own party, many influential politicians, including
former prime ministers, have called on Koizumi to stop visiting
the shrine, the editorial stated. Is Koizumi ready
to brand all these critics as people trying to curry favour with
China and South Korea?
Despite this widespread opposition, it is likely that Abe will
succeed Koizumi and continue the aggressive assertion of Japanese
imperialisms interests in the region and internationally.
See Also:
Japanese government withdraws
its troops from Iraq
[24 July 2006]
Market reform and
Japanese nationalism: the twin policies of Koizumi's government
[14 November 2005]
Koizumi's "landslide"
win in Japan's election
[15 September 2005]
Why Junichiro Koizumi
is being retained as Japanese leader
[20 September 2003]
Koizumi's election:
a turning point in Japanese politics
[28 April 2001]
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