|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
Tensions between Japan and South Korea heighten over island
dispute
By John Chan
3 May 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Tensions again flared last month between Japan and South Korea
over a disputed group of 30 islets between the two countries known
as Dokdo in Korea and Takeshima in Japan.
Dokdo is located some 87 kilometres east of South Koreas
Ullung Island and about 157 kilometres northwest of Japans
Oki Islands. South Korea has effectively controlled the group
since the end of World War II and has a small police presence
stationed there. Japan, however, insists on its ownership of Takeshima,
pointing to Japans annexation of the group in 1905 and its
colonial occupation of the entire Korean Peninsula from 1910 to
1945.
In the post-war period, Japans claim, so obviously linked
to past colonialism, received little international support. However,
in the 1990s, after the end of the Cold War, Japan began more
forcefully reasserting its strategic and economic interests in
North East Asia, including over contested maritime territories.
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has waged a particularly provocative
campaign in line with his promotion of right-wing nationalism
at home.
Seoul and Tokyo conducted several rounds of talks between 1996
to 2000 over Dokdo, which produced only a tentative agreement
for a joint-fishing zone surrounding the islets. Japan, however,
wants control over the areas gas reserves. The Korea Gas
Corporation has estimated that the seabed near Dokdo has huge
methane hydrate deposits, enough to meet South Koreas demands
for gas over the next 30 years. South Korea is planning to start
drilling next year.
Japan has also taken a tough stance toward China over gas fields
in the East China Sea, near the disputed Senkaku (or Diaoyu) islets
north of Taiwan, resulting in armed confrontations. Japanese authorities
have formally declared the group to be part of the Okinawa prefecture,
registered Japanese residents on the uninhabited islets
and sent naval ships to harass Taiwanese fishermen in the area.
The tensions over Dokdo erupted last November after South Korea
proposed changing maritime names associated with Japan at a conference
of the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) to be held
in Germany in June. Since the 1980s, Tokyo has registered Japanese
names for parts of the seabed near Dokdo. Now Seoul is seeking
to register a series of Korean names, including changing the Sea
of Japan to the East Sea. By implication, the
renaming could also justify broader maritime claims.
On March 29, Japans ministry of education approved new
history textbooks that not only further downplayed Japans
wartime atrocities, but explicitly stated Japans sovereignty
over Dokdo and Senkaku. The new texts refer to South Koreas
control of Dokdo as an illegal occupation.
Japan announced the dispatch of two ships on April 4 to conduct
a maritime survey near Dokdo from April 18 to June 30. Even before
Japanese ships approached the area, South Korea sent 20 gunboats
as well as patrol aircraft to block them. At the high point of
the standoff, South Korean coast guard threatened to use force
if the Japanese vessels did not keep away. Japan warned South
Korea that any attempt to detain the Japanese ships would be in
violation of international law.
The situation was further inflamed on April 21 when 96 Japanese
parliamentariansmostly from the ruling Liberal Democratic
Partyvisited the controversial Yasukuni Shrine to Japans
war dead. Two days of vice ministerial level talks between South
Korea and Japan teetered on the brink of collapse before a last-minute
compromise was reached on April 22. Seoul agreed to delay its
plans to rename the maritime areas and Tokyo to postpone its survey
until June. Both sides agreed to hold further talks in May to
discuss demarcating a boundary between their territorial waters
in the Sea of Japan.
Although Tokyo welcomed the outcome as a cool-headed
response, nothing has been resolved. South Korean negotiator Yu
Myung Hwan has made clear that Seoul will still seek to register
Korean names at an appropriate time. It is also considering
making Dokdo the starting point of South Koreas exclusive
economic zone, rather than Ullung Island. A shift to Dokdo would
extend South Koreas maritime area eastwards deep into current
Japanese waters.
South Korean President Roh Moo Hyun expressed his governments
hardline stance in a special televised address on April 25. The
Dokdo issue has become a matter that can no longer be managed
in a quiet manner. We will react strongly and sternly against
any physical provocation [with Japan]. This is a problem that
can never be given up or negotiated, no matter at what cost or
sacrifice, he declared.
Tokyos comments were just as belligerent. On April 26,
the Japanese foreign ministry declared that South Koreas
control of Takeshima was an illegal occupation.
Japanese professor Shunji Hiraiwa told the conservative daily
Yomiuri Shimbun on April 24: In this agreement, I
see that Japan and South Korea had a hard time settling the issue
in a way that could satisfy both countries.... The administration
of South Korean President Roh Moo Hyun tends to link history [under
Japanese colonial rule] with Japan-South Korea relations and avoids
realistic solutions to problems.
The crisis in relations between Japan and South Koreaboth
formal US allieshas prompted concern in Washington. A US
State Department official told the South Korean Yonhap news agency
on April 19: The United States longstanding position
is not to intervene between the two disputing countries. However,
the two countries should solve this problem peacefully and amicably.
In fact, Washington is responsible for inflaming the tensions
by encouraging Japan to play more assertive role in North East
Asia, particularly against China.
Reactionary nationalist campaigns
Throughout his term of office, Prime Minister Koizumi has deliberately
stirred up nationalist sentiment, both to divert growing social
tensions at home and as part of a more aggressive foreign policy
in Asia and internationally. His governments promotions
of the symbols of pre-war Imperial Japan and its approval of school
texts justifying Japans aggression in Asia have provoked
understandable anger and fears in countries like China and Korea
that suffered at the hands of Japanese imperialism.
The Chinese and Korean governments have, however, exploited
the outrage for their own purposes. Like Tokyo, Beijing and Seoul
are whipping up anti-Japanese hostility to distract attention
from their own failures to address the deepening social and economic
problems in both countries.
Just a year ago, thousands of largely middle-class youth took
to the streets of a number of Chinese cities chanting anti-Japanese
slogans and attacked innocent Japanese citizens. Similar protests
took place in South Korea against new Japanese history textbooks
and Japanese efforts to obtain a permanent seat in the UN Security
Council. All three brands of nationalism are reactionary. They
only serve to divide the working class and heighten the danger
of war in North East Asia.
As tensions escalated over Dokdo last month, a group of 30
South Korean protesters burned Japanese flags and attempted to
storm the Japanese embassy in Seoul. In front of the hotel where
Japan-South Korea negotiations took place, a truck was parked
blaring patriotic songs and plastered with signs urging Koreans
to boycott Japanese goods.
President Roh has encouraged these nationalist elements. He
came to power in 2002 by appealing to the widespread hostility
to the ongoing US military presence in South Korea. As his government
has implemented IMF demands for labour market reforms,
he has faced growing hostility from the ordinary working people.
An article in Newsweek in January, entitled A
Social Time Bomb, pointed to the vast and widening
gulf between rich and poor in South Korea since the 1997 Asian
financial crisis. In 1995, the bottom 10 percent of the population
earned 41 percent of the average income. By 2003, the figure had
fallen to 34 percent. The number of poor (defined as a four-person
family earning less than $1,360 per month) reached a record high
of 7 million people, or 15 percent of the population, in 2003.
Meanwhile, the income of the top 10 percent rose from 199 percent
of the national average in 1995 to 225 percent in 2003. Labour
market reforms have produced large numbers of temporary workersup
from 27 percent of total workforce in 2001 to 37 percent in 2004.
These casual workers earn less than 65 percent of the pay of full-time
employees and have little or no employer-paid health insurance.
Most of these changes have taken place under Roh and his Uri
Party government. Uri Party lawmaker Kim Geun Tae admitted: Neo-liberalism
has made us a winner-take-all economy.
In a televised address on April 25 belligerently denouncing
Japans claim to Dokdo, Roh declared: This is an act
of contending the legitimacy of Japans criminal history
of waging wars of aggression and annihilation, as well as 40 years
of exploitation, torture, imprisonment, forced labour, and even
military sexual slavery. We cannot tolerate this for anything.
Koizumi is likely to reply in kind before finishing his term
of office in September. One scenario mooted in the Japanese media
is a visit to the Yasukuni Shrine on August 15the day of
Japans World War II surrender. Koizumi has previously vowed
to make such a visit before leaving office. The implicit message
of such a provocative act would be that Japan will no longer kowtow
to the terms of its defeat in 1945. Inevitably it would provoke
angry protests in South Korea and China.
The continuing dispute over Dokdo highlights the growing dangers
of conflict in North East Asia. While South Korea and Japan backed
away from an armed clash last month, there is no guarantee that
the same will happen in future confrontations.
See Also:
Fishing dispute between
Taiwan and Japan leads to diplomatic tensions
[8 July 2005]
Anti-Japanese protests
and the reactionary nature of Chinese nationalism
[29 April 2005]
Behind China-Japan
tensions Washington fuels Japanese militarism--Part One
[25 April 2005]
Japan uses submarine
incident to whip up anti-Chinese nationalism
[29 November 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |