Current US-China Relations
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part 1: The lame duck and the greenhorn
Part 2: The challenge of unilateralism
Part 3: Dynamics of the Korea crisis
Part 4: Proliferation, imperialism - and the 'China threat'
Part 5: Kim Il-sung and China
Part 6: Korea under Park Chung-hee
Part 7: Clinton's belated path to peace
Part 8: Bush's bellicose policy on N Korea
Part 9: The North Korean perspective
Part 10: The Changing South
Korea Position
Part 11: Japanese Strategy to become a “Beautiful
Nation”
This article appeared in AToL on
March 3, 2007
While Japan
had been keenly aware of the need to maintain harmonious relations with
its
Asian neighbors by keeping the ugly head of militarism below radar
range all
through the Cold War, a persistent push for a revival of militarism has
steadily emerged since the end of the Cold War in 1991. Japan’s
ruling circles have since concluded that Japan
must aggressively protect and enhance its national interests with
re-militarization amid a rapidly changing post Cold War international
environment
in which force is routinely preferred by the sole remaining superpower
to
implement its global policy of transformation. To be an ally of
consequence, Japan
needs to remilitarize when the sole remaining superpower has selected
force as the
solution of choice in international disputes while diplomacy has been
sidelined
to only as a means of last resort. The US-led global War on Terrorism
is a
shoot-first, ask-questions-later operation in which multilateral
diplomacy begins
only when war fails, as the current situation in Iraq
demonstrates. Japan’s
aspiration to be again a player of consequence in international affair
requires
her to develop credible force projection capability. As Japan
moves to imitate US
neo-liberalism in economics, it moves also to echo US
militarism in international relations.
Despite Japan’s close post-WWII
relations to the US as a
deferential ally, the 1970s were times of antagonistic US anxiety over
an alleged
“Japanese threat” as the defeated nation reemerged as a rising economic
power
through its opportunistic exploitation of US overseas spending in the
Cold War
and US preferential treatment for Japanese exports to US markets. All
through
the Cold War, security alliance with the US
had been an economic benefit to Japan.
As the Cold War settled down to Détente and the need for Japan
as a US captured
ally against Communism in East Asia subsided, anti-Japanese feeling
grew from
what US companies viewed as Japanese predatory trading practices in key
sectors
in the US economy such as steel, ship building, auto manufacturing,
electronics
and real estate. The contrast between Japanese industrial policy and US
market fundamentalism led to US demand for “a level playing field” in
bilateral
trade with Japan,
in effect demanding Japan
to shoulder an increasing share of the cost of the security alliance.
China Replaces Japan as US Trade Target
Beginning around the 1980’s, China gradually emerged as the new
target of US concern over outsourcing of US jobs, taking Japan off the
crosshair of US animosity over trade. The new economic hostility
towards China
is different than that toward Japan
on several levels. Geopolitically, China
is still a communist nation and not a subservient US
ally like Japan.
However, Chinese export to US markets is largely financed by US
investment, unlike the situation in Japan
where US
capital faced an uphill struggle trying to break through entrenched
Japanese
protectionism left untouched by US Cold-War era tolerance. As a result,
anti-Japan noises of the 1980s came from US
big business while anti-China noises now come from US populist
sentiments and
dismissed by big business.
US Exchange Rate
Warfare
Unable to break down intractable Japanese protectionism, the
US
resorted to
exchange rate warfare and succeeded in defeating the Japanese threat.
Now the
same exchange rate was is being launched against China.
China
has been on a high-growth path in the past two decades, albeit from a
dismally low
base, while Japan
fell into protracted economic stagnation off high plateau as a result
of the US
strong-arming the Plaza Accord in 1985 to force a sudden, sharp rise in
the
exchange value of the freely convertible yen. The yen eventually
stabilized
only after rising more than 51% against the dollar, forcing the
Japanese
economy on a downward path for more than two decades with no end yet in
sight. The
yen rose from 360 to the dollar in 1971 to top out at less than 80 to
the
dollar in April 1995. The Japanese economy has yet to fully recover
from the
meltdown of its financial sector brought on by financial globalization
through
dollar hegemony, even though it remains an unmatched industrial
competitor. The
dark experience of Japan
and to a lesser degree South Korea
leaves China
justifiably apprehensive about making its own currency fully
convertible with
floating rates and opening its financial markets.
First Gulf War Reignited Japanese Militarism
Besides economics, the negative impact of the first Gulf War
in 1990-91 on Japanese foreign relations came as a surprised shock to Tokyo.
Within the limits of its pacifist constitution, Japan
backed the US
fully
as a dutiful ally. However, being prevented by its pacifist
constitution from
sending combat troops overseas, Japan
ended up paying heavily for the financial cost of the war while gaining
little diplomatic
benefits.
Militarism as an
Option to Revitalize the Japanese Economic Miracle
The 1990s proved to be a decade of self doubt for the Japanese
ruling elite. The post-war Japanese economic miracle and resultant
prosperity were
abruptly interrupted by the catastrophic collapse of Japan’s
property and stock market bubbles in the late 1980s, resulting in
devastating
price deflation and persistent economic stagnation. Keeping yen
interest rates
low for extended periods failed to revive the Japanese economy due to
what Keynes
identified as a liquidity trap in which banks are unable to find
willing or
credit- worthy borrowers in a dire market of shrinking demand. All low
yen
interest rate did was to allow international currency speculators to
profit
from yen “carry trade” by borrowing low-interest yen to lend overseas
in
high-interest dollar, while hedging exchange rate risks with
derivatives. Japan
fell into a deepening debt spiral domestically while it emerged as the
world
biggest creditor nation overseas with the largest foreign exchange
reserves.
To this day Japan, despite facing a crisis at home of
excessive domestic debt, continues to own huge amount of dollars that
cannot be
spent at home and that have to be loaned back to the US
at terms dictated by the US Federal Reserve, which set dollar interest
rates by
fiat, in defiance of global market forces. Japan’s
long-term gross national debt of $7.4 trillion amounted to 160% of its
GDP of
$4.6 trillion in 2006. It was the highest of any G7 nation and more
than twice
that of the US
which was at 67%. Japan
has been unable to utilize sovereign credit to effectively meet the
investment
needs of its private sector. As a result, Japan
looks to international capital (mostly from the US),
money (more than $2 trillion) that really belongs to Japan,
having earned it from export. Despite residual protectionism, Japan
has been selling increasingly larger stakes in its supposedly
successful
industrial enterprises to US
transnational corporations and financial institutions while it holds
around $1
trillion foreign reserves denominated in paper dollars.
Japan Among the First
Victims of Dollar Hegemony
Despite its industrial prowess, the Japanese economy was among
the first of many victims of dollar hegemony, a monetary virus created
by the
dollar, a fiat currency since President Nixon took it off gold in 1971,
continuing to assume the status of the key reserve currency for
international
trade while falling over 50% against the yen through the 1970s.
US-Japan trade
became a game where the US
produced fiat dollars at will while the Japanese produced real goods
that
dollars could buy at a dysfunctional exchange rate. The more Japan
earns in trade surplus with the US,
the more real wealth leaves Japan
for the US
through dollar hegemony.
LDP Suffers
Conceptual Menopause and Policy Paralysis
The Liberal Democrat Party (LDP) of Japan,
formed in 1955 to “unite conservative forces and stabilize politics” to
solidify the purge of the left in Japanese politics by US
occupation. The LDP is a political monopoly that had ruled successfully
on a
strict regime of industrial policy designed to facilitate post-war
economic
reconstruction. The Party characterizes itself constitutionally as “(1)
a
national party, (2) a pacifist party, (3) a genuinely democratic party,
(4) a
parliamentary party, (5) a progressive party, and (6) a party committed
to
creating a welfare state.” On these principles, the LDP has ruled
post-war Japan
as a one-party political system since its founding.
While the LDP led Japan to post-war prosperity with close
government support of big business during the Cold War, it is however
completely clueless as a political institution about how to restructure
the
economy to deal with the onslaught of globalization of unregulated
financial
markets after the Cold War. The LDP has remained in power for more than
five
decades through electoral gerrymandering and hefty subsidies to special
interest groups, particularly its power base in rural farming
electorates and
the zaibatsu, giant industrial combines buoyant by export
growth
subsidized by government industrial policy; but it fell into conceptual
menopause and policy paralysis beginning two decades ago with regard to
the
urgent task of restructuring the Japanese economy to meet the
destructive
onslaught on economic nationalism by finance globalization.
Sharp disputes within the LDP over political reform to meet
the new financial globalization produced a seismic split in the party
in 1993, causing
the party to briefly lose power and control of politics for the first
time in
38 years. A series of relatively short-lived LDP-led coalition
governments
followed, including an alliance in 1996 with the largest postwar
opposition
party: the Socialist Party of Japan (SPJ). But instead of the SPJ
revitalizing
the ruling LDP with bold domestic socialist programs, the alliance
ruined the
SPJ, now known as Social Democrats, by forcing it to support the
distressed Japanese
export sector with anti-labor policies, thus failing to increase
domestic
consumption demand, the key to prosperity in an economy plague by
overcapacity.
None of the fleeting coalition governments since the mid-1990s
was able to overcome solid popular opposition to the conservative
agenda of
reviving militarism, forbidden by the post-war pacifist constitution.
Nor could
these coalition governments overcome special interest opposition to
proposals
to restructure the economy to respond to emerging globalization. The
traditional Japanese system of keiretsu,
a close-knit structure that vertically integrates manufacturers,
suppliers,
distributors, traders, banks and insurance companies working closely
with
government bureaucracy to gain overseas market share, was too
structurally
imbedded to allow radical reform without dismantling the entire
Japanese socio-economic
system or rejecting the delicate balance between rights and obligations
in
traditional Japanese culture.
Desperate Gamble on
Koisumi
The installation of Junichiro Koizumi as prime minister in
2001 was a desperate gamble for the troubled LDP. His father, Junya
Koizumi,
was director general of the Japan Defense Agency and a member of the
Diet and
was purged from politics for war crimes by the Allied occupation
government but
returned to the Diet in 1952. Junichiro’s cousin died a kamikaze pilot.
His
grandfather, Matajiro Koizumi was an early advocate of postal
privatization when
he served as Minister of Posts and Telecommunications under Prime
Minister Yuko
Hamaguchi (1929–30) who pursued a conciliatory policy toward China
and compromised with the US
in the London Naval Treaty of 1930, measures that were unpopular with
the
militarists. Hamaguchi was shot by an ultranationalist in 1930 and died
from
the wounds a year later. Baron Reijirō
Wakatsuki succeeded Hamaguchi but he failed to control the Army, and
was unable
either to prevent the military-instigated Manchurian Incident or to
rein in the
Army from further escalation of hostilities in China
afterwards. Wakatsuki opposed the war against the US
in retirement.
Junichiro Koizumi fashions himself as Japan’s male Margaret
Thatcher to promote all-out neo-liberalism in Japan, the way war-time
emperor
Hirohito fashioned himself after the Queen Victoria to promoting
Japanese imperialism
in Asia.
With his unorthodox image of being a
champion of the need to
remold an obsolete Japan, Koizumi had previously been dismissed as a
cultural maverick,
a derogatory term used in Japan against the likes of Sony founder Akio
Morita
who enjoyed more respect overseas than at home in Japanese society
where
individualism is viewed as a social disease.
However, imminent electoral defeat forced the LDP elders to
back Koizumi despite his refusal to accommodate the factional bosses as
required by the traditional route to top office. Koizumi exploited his
unconventional persona by posturing as a political rebel and opponent
of the
staid establishment to win support from disaffected voters,
particularly among
the alienated youth coming into voting age who, as a generation, were
victimized by financial globalization without having personally enjoyed
any of
the pre-globalization benefits, such as Shushin
koyo, the lifetime guarantee of employment by the employer
corporation and
other benefits of corporate welfare.
Behind Koizumi’s neo-liberalism in economics, however, was a
neo-conservative agenda in geopolitics. As prime minister, Koizumi
immediately
began his annual public visits to the Yasukuni shrine to honor not just
war
dead but convicted war criminals.
In May 2005, Japanese legislators overwhelmingly, by a vote
of 202 to 14 in the upper house, approved a controversial bill, a month
after
the lower house’s approval, creating a national holiday to honor
war-time
emperor Hirohito. The holiday took effect in 2006, to be known as
“Showa Day,”
after the official name for Hirohito’s six-decade-long reign which
lasted from
1926 to 1989. It was a ritual that critics identify as the latest in a
series
of symbolic gestures to glorify Japan’s
militarist past and shift away from its post-war pacifism. The US
has its Martin Luther King Day since 1986 to commemorate passive
resistance to
racism while Japan beginning
2006 has its Showa Day to idolize the glory of former empire.
Japanese opponents of the Showa Day bill condemned its
passage. “The ruling Liberal Democratic Party wants to promote
chauvinism
through this,” said Seiji Mataichi, an upper house lawmaker from the
Social
Democratic Party and one of the handful of legislators who opposed the
bill. He
noted that debate continues over Hirohito’s responsibility of
militarism and
war.
The Koizumi government also authorized revisionist school
history textbooks that are unapologetic about and denial of Japan’s
wartime record of inhumane atrocity. He dismissed mass protests in China
and South Korea
against such revision of history, declaring the issues as matters of
Japanese
internal affair even though the atrocities were all committed beyond
Japanese territory
on the soil and the persons of compatriots of the protestors.
9-11 Provided an
Opening for Japanese Militarism
The September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks on the US
homeland provided a timely opening for Japan
militarism revival. Koizumi immediately threw Japan
solidly behind the Bush administration’s “war on terrorism”, endearing
himself
personally to Bush. The US-led war of terrorism was viewed by Koizumi
as a
golden opportunity to restore Japan
as a “normal nation”, one able to use its armed forces to assert its
national
interest uninhibited by a pacifist constitution. He pushed through
legislation
to allow the dispatch of Japanese warships to support US
invasion of Afghanistan,
decisively breaking with his foreign minister and key ally Makiko
Tanaka, who
was critical of US
neo-conservative militarist transformational foreign policy and who
advocated a
more independent path for Japan.
In 2003, despite overwhelming popular opposition of 88%, Koizumi
dispatched
Japanese troops to Iraq,
the first time Japanese military personnel had been sent to an active
war zone
since World War II. Japanese troops were also
sent to Indonesia to assist with relief work after the December 2004 Indian Ocean
tsunami.
The defense minister of the new administration of Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe, successor to Koizumi, is Fumio Kyuma, former Chairman of
the LDP
General Council. The outspoken defense minister, whose office has just
been
elevated to full ministry status from a unit within the Ministry of
State, said
in a Diet committee session in December 2006 that former Prime Minister
Koizumi’s expression of Japan’s
outright support for the US-led invasion of Iraq
“was not made officially” but was just comments Koizumi made to the
media.
Kyuma criticized US President George Bush’s decision to launch the war
in Iraq
in a speech before the Japan National Press Club on January 24, 2007,
saying
they could have severe effects on the bilateral alliance, causing an
immediate
official protect from the US States Department. The revival of Japanese
militarism is not synonymous with unquestioned support for US
militarism, signaling a rising degree of independence from the US
in security matters. Japanese national interest in the Middle
East
is not identical to US
national interest.
Still, the revival of Japanese militarism is reflected in
many quasi-official pronouncements. A typical example is a lengthy
September
2005 speech sponsored by the Japanese Embassy in Saudi Arabia in which
Masayuki
Yamauchi, Tokyo University Professor and Chef de Mission of the Japan-Middle East
Cultural
Exchanges and Dialogue Mission, after acknowledging that “the
foundations for Japan’s post-war prosperity were built with the onset
of
regional conflicts in East Asia and the Cold War,” asserts that
anti-Japanese
feelings in China and South Korea are rooted in jealousy, not unlike
Saddam
Hussein’s invasion of oil-rich Kuwait which he misinterprets as also
motivated
by jealousy, betraying his ignorance of Middle East history.
“Jealousy of and a backlash against Japan have strong roots
in areas of East Asia close to Japan, and it is from these roots that
anti-Japanese feeling has emanated in complex undercurrents. The
further away
from Japan
one
travels, to Southeast and South Asia, praise
for Japan
increases and moving still further away, to the Arab countries of the Middle
East and Turkey,
it can be said that such envy evaporates and instead transforms into
praise and
respect coupled with aspirations. This ‘doughnut phenomenon’ of course
is
undoubtedly related to Japan’s
history between 1905 and 1945 and whether the countries experienced at
first
hand Japanese colonialism and the war. The “doughnut phenomenon” came
into
sharp relief this year when fanatical anti-Japanese feeling came
gushing forth
in both China
and South Korea.
Although Japan
provided a total of US$11.5 billion in support of the multinational
force
engaged in the war, it could not even fulfill a role in peacekeeping
operations, and Japan
took no more than a backseat role in international politics at the time
of the
formation of a post-Gulf War Middle East order. This is not a blunder
of career
diplomats but rather the responsibility for failure falls to Japanese
politicians who were lacking in any kind of political philosophy or
strategic
initiatives,” Yamaguchi said.
While Professor Yamaguchi is off target with his doughnut
analogy of distance and hostility, highlighted by the fact that
Southeast Asia,
including Singapore, further from Japan than East Asia, remains the
hotbed of anti-Japan
feelings, his views are quite representative of Japanese narcissism.
Popular anti-Japanese
feelings in Asia are based more on Japanese
wartime
atrocities, crimes against humanity, than on Japanese colonialism,
crimes
against nations. To expand Professor Yamaguchi’s “doughnut” theory,
there is also
no anti-Japanese sentiment on Mars because the Japanese atrocity never
reached
that far.
To many Japanese chauvinists, the 1991 Gulf war was the low
point of Japan’s postwar diplomacy when
its
pacifist constitution, which renounces the use of force as a means of
settling
international disputes, suddenly becomes the reason why Japan
is not getting proper respect from other governments rather than a
source of moral
pride. To deflect the sense of national shame for having been forced in
defeat to
accept a US-imposed constitution, many Japanese have rationalized
constitutional pacification not as a dishonorable imposition by an
arrogant victor
on a defenseless vanquished, but as a posture of moral regeneration
against the
horror of war, which had brought on two atomic-bomb attacks on its
homeland and
civilians in a blatant display of state terrorism.
In the 1991 first Gulf War, Japanese diplomats saw their government
bluntly condemned by allies for failing to contribute even a token
dispatch of
military personnel to the multinational force against Iraq
because of misapplied constitutional restraints. As US
propaganda posed the Iraqi reclamation of Kuwait
as a violation of the international principle of respect for
sovereignty, Japanese
non-participation was interpreted as a lapse in its international
responsibility. Tokyo’s
belated and
reluctant contribution of $13 billion to the war effort was
off-handedly dismissed
as check book diplomacy. After the conflict, when Kuwait,
a major exporter of oil to Japan,
thanked a long list of nations for their defense of its sovereignty, Japan
stood out conspicuously by its omission.
In comparison with the 1991 Gulf War, the neo-conservative
Koizumi administration acted swiftly and decisively in the 2002
Afghanistan War
and the 2003 Iraq War. With a 70% general support rating, Koizumi
redirected a
strong public mandate towards long-standing right-wing inclination to
remove
the constitutional restraints put on Japanese militarism in the wake of
defeat
in WWII by the victor. Using new laws to legalize militarized
peacekeeping,
Koizumi pushed the constitutional envelope by dispatching Japanese
military
personnel to support the US
war effort. The maritime self-defense forces helped US forces in
intelligence
gathering operations, while ground troops assisted in refugee relief
operations
in Pakistan
and
provided rearguard support for US military operations, including the
provision
of supplies, transport, medical services and security protection for US
bases
in Japan
for
operations far from Japan.
New legislation was submitted in parliament to allow the Self Defense
Forces (SDF)
to provide support to US forces in pre-emptive crises beyond “areas
surrounding
Japan”,
not
withstanding that force projection is by nature offensive.
“We want to provide maximum support to the US,
our ally, with the cooperation of the Japanese people,” Koizumi said. “Japan
would like to take an active role in the fight against terrorism.”
Anti-terrorism is then exploited as a moral pretext for the revival of
militarism in Japan.
Flexing Japan’s
economic muscle, Tokyo
provided
emergency financial aid to Pakistan
and India
as rewards
for their cooperation with the US
war on terrorism. This represented a de-facto change of policy as Japan
had halted economic assistance to the same two countries in 1998 in
protest of
their separate nuclear weapons tests.
Tokyo was
nervous that Japan
after 9:11, 2001 would again
be left
on the sidelines of big-power maneuvering as in 1991. Japan
suffered substantial civilian losses in the 9-11 terrorist attacks on
the US,
with 24 Japanese nationals missing and the offices of 31 Japanese
companies
destroyed. However its ability to respond militarily was
constitutionally so
limited that the US
put far more effort into building anti-terrorism cooperation with China
and Russia,
which command more military and intelligence capability. As the
conflicts in
Iraq and Afghanistan drag on, Japan feels obliged to accelerate
revision of its
pacifist constitution which both the US and Japan desire for separate
reasons.
The unintended victims of the terrorist attacks on the US
could prove to be Japanese pacifism. And the unintended consequence of
the US
War on Terrorism could be a revival of militarism in Japan
and other nations in Asia and around the world.
US Invasion of Iraq Cost LDP Majority
After the March 2003 Iraq
invasion, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) led by Koizumi
suffered an
eclipse in its long-held majority in Japan’s
lower house of the Diet in the November
9, 2003 elections. Campaigning on a platform of
privatization of
public services and utilities, pension reforms and the deployment of
Japanese
SDF troops to Iraq, the ruling LDP lost 10 seats, retaining just 237 in
the
480-seat lower house and lost its ruling majority. The LDP once again
had to rely
on coalition partners: the pacifist Buddhist New Komeito Party, which
won 34
seats, and the right-wing nationalist New Conservative Party which won
4 seats.
Following the poll, three independents joined the LDP, giving the
ruling
coalition a total of 278 seats, down from its pre-election total of 286.
The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) won 40 seats to reach
177 in the Diet on a platform opposing the dispatch of SDF troops to Iraq.
Its success led several commentators to conclude, somewhat prematurely,
that Japan
had moved into a new political age, with a genuine multiparty political
system
after a half-century of one party rule by the LDP. Voter turnout
dropped 3%
from the 2000 election to 60%, reflecting public apathy toward politics
and
frustration with a stagnant economy and job cuts, increased taxes to
finance
corporate bailouts while neglecting under-funded pension and health
system. The
political left, never very strong since its exhaustive purge by the US
occupation, was a big loser, with the Social Democratic Party reduced
to 6
seats from 18, and the Communist Party losing 11 of its 20 seats.
The DPJ opposition to the revival of
militarism and to the
deployment Japanese troops to Iraq
was technical, arguing that Japanese troops should only be sent to Iraq
under the framework of the United Nations, not under conditions where
the US
military still controls the country. This position reflects the view of
the
ruling circles that Japan’s
interests in the Middle East, above all its
dependence
on oil from the region, are not served by domination of the Middle
East by the US
and Britain,
which ironically reinforces the need of an independent Japanese
military.
Makiko Tanaka
A significant development in Japanese politics was the
election of independent candidate Makiko Tanaka, the former and first
female
foreign minister from April 2001 to January 2002 in the Koizumi
administration.
Daughter of former Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka who, following Nixon,
re-established diplomatic relations with China,
Ms. Tanaka ran in Niigata No. 5 district after she was fired from the
cabinet
for making remarks critical of the prime minister.
Kicked out of the ruling LDP and barred from
party membership for two years, she ran as an independent and defeated
the
incumbent LDP candidate who had taken over her seat when she resigned
from the
Diet over some minor scandal that she was later exonerated. After a
4-month
political absence, she made a political comeback on an ideological
alignment
with “like-minded lawmakers”. As foreign
minister, she achieved international notoriety when she referred to
George W Bush
as “totally an asshole” during a visit to her old private high school
near Philadelphia
in 2001.
Ms Tanaka, who contributed to Koizumi’s rapid rise to
prominence and popularity and who shares his neo-liberal economic
reform
agenda, was removed as foreign minister as differences began to emerge
over Japan’s
unquestioning alliance with the US.
Tanaka is representative of a faction in Japanese politics that sees Japan’s
future as being bound up with closer relations with China
and other Asian nations, where Japan
has large and growing investments and important trade relations on top
of close
cultural affinity.
The Buddhist New Komeito Party, a pacifist organization that
represents the “weak and underrepresented” in society opposes the
deployment of
SDF troops to Iraq as well as further amendments and revisions to
Japan’s
pacifist constitution. It also aims to protect small business and the
working
class from adverse impacts from of further economic restructuring
advocated by
Koizumi and Tanaka.
Shinzo Abe
On 26 September 2006,
Shinzo Abe, the newly elected
president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), became at 52
the
youngest post-war Prime Minister of Japan, after winning 66%, or 464
votes out
of the total 703 votes from LDP lawmakers.
On January 10, 2007, Abe upgraded the Defense
Agency to full ministry status
for the first time since Japan’s defeat in WWII, as a part of his push
to
reclaim a full role for Japan in world affairs as a major power. Though
largely
symbolic, the change gives the military establishment greater budgetary
and
policy powers and greater prestige even if not respectability.
As Japan’s
newly elected and 90th Prime Minister, Abe is the first
leader born
after WWII. Facing tense diplomatic stress, Abe began his premiership
with an
urgent task of mending ties with Japan’s
Asian neighbors. In October 2006 Abe paid “ice-breaking” visits to China
with which no top level visit from Japan
has taken place since 2001, and to South
Korea,
signaling a new approach in Japanese foreign policy with regard to Asia
to break Japan’s
diplomatic deadlocks with China
and South Korea
left by his predecessor Koizumi. Abe hopes his new approach would not
only
serve Japan's
national interests, but also lead to improved stability in Northeast
Asia.
Abe carries a personal burden of a sensitive heritage. Under
postwar US
occupation, his maternal grandfather, Nobusuke Kishi, was initially
condemned
as a war criminal for his role as a high official overseeing the
Japanese
puppet regime in Manchuria and a minister in
the wartime
cabinet of Prime Minister Hideki Tojo. Kishi was nevertheless
rehabilitated to
meet US
need
for conservative politicians to keep the increasingly popular left in
check in
post-war Japanese politics. He rose quickly to prominence in the LDP
and became
prime minister in 1957.
In 1960, Kishi pushed through the renewal of US-Japan
Security Treaty amid massive public protests. Anti-US demonstrations
became so
intense that then White House press secretary James Hagerty, in Japan
to prepare for a presidential visit, had to move about by helicopter to
avoid protestors
on the ground. President Dwight
Eisenhower had to cancel his planned trip to Japan
and Kishi himself eventually had to resign. But the treaty survived.
Abe’s granduncle, Eisaku Sato, Kishi’s brother, was prime
minister from 1964 to 1972. Abe’s own father, Shintaro, also a leading
LDP
politician, was slated to become prime minister when he died suddenly
in 1991.
Abe had left his job as an executive with Kobe Steel to become his
father’s
secretary after Shintaro’s appointment as foreign minister in 1982.
After
Shintaro’s death, Abe took over his father’s seat in parliament
representing Yamaguchi Prefecture.
Abe’s family political heritage goes back to the Meiji
Restoration of 1868. His Yamaguchi
Prefecture
was the base of the powerful Choshu clan that joined with elements of
the rising
bourgeoisie to overthrow the feudal Shogunate and restore the Meiji
Emperor as
a central authority who modernized Japan
on the model of the British Empire. While the
US imposed
post-WW II constitution formally established Japan as a constitutional
monarchy,
right-wing elements of the Japanese establishment continue to regard
the
emperor as the revered symbol of ultra-nationalism, patriotism and
militarism
in the land of Samurai culture, notwithstanding that the Meiji
Restoration
demolished the feudal Samurai cult and co-opted its surviving members
and
values into industry, business, government and the military in the
service of
the Emperor.
The Impact of
Westernization of Japan
Notwithstanding the historical image of the Meiji
Restoration as a modernization movement, policy conflicts persisted
throughout
the Meiji period over how much Japan
should emulate or borrow from the West. Opinion was divided between kaikoku
(open the country) and jôi (expel the barbarians) after
Commodore Perry
landed in 1853. While tensions continued throughout the Meiji period
regarding Japan’s
policy toward foreigners among politicians and alien ideas among
intellectuals,
the Japanese masses went from xenophobia to xenophile, seduced by crass
Western
mannerism and low culture while the whole nation adopted the martial
aspects of
Western civilization without full appreciation of its humanist side.
Among the perverse Western ideas and institutions the Meiji reformers
adopted was a quest for fukoku kyôhei (rich country,
strong military) to
catch up with Western empires and to gain national power and wealth,
rejecting traditional
appreciation of the virtue of harmony in Asian civilization as
expressed in
Confucianism and Buddhism. The rise of Japanese militarism is closely
associated
with curbs on Buddhism and Confucianism by Shinto as a state religion
with the
Emperor as its living god.
A December 15, 1945 Directive for the Disestablishment of State Shinto
from
the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers to the Imperial Japanese
Government
decreed that “in order to prevent recurrence of the perversion of
Shinto theory
and beliefs into militaristic and ultra-nationalistic propaganda
designed to
delude the Japanese people and lead them into wars of aggression …The
sponsorship, support, perpetuation, control, and dissemination of
Shinto by the
Japanese national, prefectual, and local governments, or by public
officials,
subordinates, and employees acting in their official capacity are
prohibited
and will cease immediately. No visits to Shinto shrines and no rites,
practices, or ceremonies associated with Shinto will be conducted or
sponsored
by any educational institution supported wholly or in part by public
funds ...
terms whose connotation in Japanese is inextricably connected with
State
Shinto, militarism, and ultra-nationalism is prohibited and will cease
immediately … No official of the national, prefectural, or local
government,
acting in his public capacity, will visit any shrine to report his
assumption
of office, to report on conditions of government, or to participate as
a
representative of government in any ceremony or observance.”
Many Japanese rationalize war-time Japan’s
aggression in Asia as a program to liberate
Asians from
Western imperialism, notwithstanding that the Japanese version of
colonialism
was infinitely harsher than Franco-British colonialism. The sad result
was that
Japanese colonialism enabled Western colonialism in Asia
to claim its pugnacious self as a benign system that did more good than
harm,
as apologists for slavery also claim for slavery based on atrocious
labor
conditions during the Industrial Revolution. Japan’s
conflict with its Asian neighbors is rooted in the indiscriminate
Westernization of its national character which might have come from the
fact
that Japan
had
benn historically mostly on the periphery of Asian civilization.
The anti-feudal ideology of the Meiji
Restoration began as a
progressive force to build the modern Japanese state with an
industrialized
economy on the European model, enabling Japan to be the only country in
Asia to
successfully withstand the onslaught of Western imperialism and in the
process
established Japan essentially as a warped version of a Western power
located in
Asia, with little contribution to the revival of an Asian civilization.
Ironically,
as Japan
integrated itself into the Western economic system, the Great
Depression after
WWI hit Japan
harder than any other economy in Asia, mostly
because
colonialism had placed most Asian economies in a state of permanent
economic
recession.
Economic Collapse led
to Rise of Militarism
Economic collapse in the 1930s transformed the bright,
optimistic political climate of the Taishô
period that began in 1912 into aggressive industrial militarism. Japan’s
solution to economic depression was to compete with the European
imperialism by
military conquest, initially in East Asia and
later in Southeast Asia.
Japan views itself as
a Western Power in Asia
Post-war Japan
continues to view itself as a Western power that is more at ease with
Western
institutions such as the Group of Seven (G7) and the Trilateral
Commission. The
long economic stagnation since the 1990’s similarly has given rise to a
new
militarism as it did during the Meiji Restoration. Until this denial of
self of
Japan
as an
Asian country is purged in Japanese mentality, Japan
will not be a constructive force in Asian geo-politics.
Abe’s Abduction
Fixation
Although comparatively young, Shinzo Abe was given the key
post of deputy chief cabinet secretary in Koizumi’s cabinet. His
political star
elevated quickly to national prominence in 2002, when he pressed
Koizumi to
take up the issue of Japanese citizens abducted by North
Korea in the 1970s and 1980s, a
longstanding
pet topic of right-wing extremists. Abe accompanied Koizumi on a visit
to Pyongyang
in 2002 and pressed for an official North Korean admission of, and
apology for,
the abductions.
On February 8, at the latest round of six-party talks
involving the US, China, Japan, Russia and the two Koreas to discuss
North
Korea’s nuclear weapons program since August 2003, North Korea accused
Japan of
jeopardizing progress at international nuclear talks, calling Tokyo’s
insistence on discussing the North’s past abduction of Japanese
nationals
“disgusting” and saying Japan had not right to be at the negotiations
and the
abduction issue had no place on the agenda.
“It is ridiculous and disgusting that Japan,
which is not even qualified to attend the talks, keeps saying that the
abduction issue is a basic agenda. The international community will not
tolerate Japanese politicians’ behavior if the nuclear talks become
complicated
and fail to produce substantial fruit due to Japan's
improper maneuver,” said a commentary published on the same day by the
official
Korean Central News Agency.
Though Japan
has been at the forefront of international efforts to force North
Korea to abandon its nuclear program,
it has
refused to discuss compensatory aid to North
Korea
unless its government provides full information about its kidnapping of
Japanese citizens decades ago to train spies in Japanese language and
culture. The
issue is an emotional one for Japan,
still stunned by the North’s admission in 2002 that it abducted 13
Japanese
citizens in the 1970s and 80s. North
Korea
allowed five to return home later that year, saying the others had
died, and
declared the case closed. Japan
has demanded proof and says more of its citizens may have been taken.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has
championed the abduction
cause, pledging not to establish diplomatic relations with North
Korea until it “shows sincerity” on
the abduction
matter, echoing the Bush administration’s “moral clarity” posture of
not
negotiating with an evil North Korea.
“Japan
is
prepared to play an even bigger role in assistance to North
Korea, but there must be progress on
the
abduction issue,” a Foreign Ministry official said on February 8 on
customary
condition of anonymity. “It is true that the main focus of the
six-party talks
is the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula. But the talks are also
a
comprehensive forum for discussing issues of security, politics and
economics
in Northeast Asia,” he said. Analysts warn that
continuing
Japanese intransigence could impede the disarmament talks.<>
“The abductions are too important an issue for Japan
to compromise on, while it’s unclear what Pyongyang
could offer in terms of progress,” said Noriyuki Suzuki, director of
Radiopress, a Japanese news agency that monitors North Korean media.
“It’s
entirely possible that the issue will hurt overall progress in
disarmament,”
Suzuki said. The unresolved fate of the
8 Japanese citizens in North Korea
is holding the de-nuclearization of the Korean peninsula hostage, as
well as endangering
all of Japan’s
population of 130 million.
Abe became LDP secretary general in 2003 and chief cabinet
secretary in 2005, positions traditionally reserved for potential prime
ministers. He took a forceful stance on foreign affairs, including
backing for
the joint US-Japan missile defense system and comprehensive sanctions
against North Korea.
During the North Korean “missile
crisis” in July 2005, Abe called for Japan
to take pre-emptive military action against North
Korea if Pyongyang
tested more missiles, echoing Bush’s pre-emptive defense doctrine.
The New Japan wants to be also an International Rule
Maker
Abe represents a young generation of Japanese elite and is a
modern media-savvy politician, acutely conscious of the power of the
media and
the importance of public relations to secure popular support. Yet for
all his
modern gloss and progressive exterior, the new prime minister is deeply
beholden
to a neoconservative constituent. Abe stands for not merely a strong Japan,
but a powerful Japan
prepared to protect and enhance its national interest with force
projection. He
has pledged to actively pursue “a new diplomacy under which Japan
at times takes leadership and asserts opinion to set the world’s
rules.” In
other word, Japan
is no longer satisfied with merely playing well the game whose rules
were
written by the superpowers, but now wants a pro-active role in writing
new
rules for the post-Cold War era. This is
not necessarily an unconstructive approach unless Japan
chooses the path of neo-imperialism through military force.
Abe will work for Japan’s
permanent membership in the UN Security Council and see Japan’s
preparedness to contribute militarily to UN peace-keeping as a
prerequisite for
Security Council membership. Abe promotes increased influence for the
military
in policy planning, while simultaneously distancing Japan
from its share of guilt and responsibility for WWII and Japanese
atrocity in
war time. Unfortunately, a denial of history inevitably leads to a
repeat of
history.
Domestically, Abe wants to strengthen the office of the prime
minister by the creation of a Japanese version of the US
security infrastructure in the form of the Central Intelligence Agency
and
National Security Council that report directly to the prime minister.
Just as
prewar Japan
went down the wrong path by copying the British Empire,
the Japan
of
the 21st century is in danger of going down the wrong path
again by
copying US
militaristic
neo-imperialism. Japan
has the potential to shape a new national destiny as a deserving leader
in the
Asian Century. But to fulfill that high destiny instead of a replay of
US
Manifest Destiny of colonialism, Japan
must avoid again setting itself apart from Asia
both in
terms of geopolitical interest and value systems to once again choose
the low
road of militaristic imperialism.
Revision of the
Pacifist Constitution
Abe stands firmly behind the revision of the US-imposed 1947
pacifist constitution asserting that “from a standpoint of emerging
from the
post-war regime, I want to show leadership on a new constitution.” A 1999 Japanese Defense White Paper stated that it would
not be
against Japan’s constitution to make pre-emptive strikes if it has
reason to
believe other countries are setting out to attack it. This was an echo
of US
preemptive doctrine that was abused by the G.W. Bush White House to
launch the
disastrous war on Iraq. Exploiting evolving new security situations in East
Asia, with a rising China
and nuclear armed North Korea,
Abe rationalizes that a strictly defensive military posture is no
longer a
credible deterrent, nor is the exclusive reliance on a US
nuclear umbrella. By extension, as
Japanese
militarism copies US national security structure, Japan can be expected
to also
copy US doctrine of force projection capability to carry out
pre-emptive wars
on foreign soil, initially in East Asia.
The May 1, 2006 Joint Statement by Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, Japanese Minister of
Foreign
Affairs Taro Aso, and Japanese Minister of State for Defense Fukushiro
Nukaga
states that US-Japan security relationship is the indispensable
foundation of
Japan’s security and of peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region
and the
linchpin of American security policy in the region. The ministers
stressed the
imperative of strengthening and improving the effectiveness of
bilateral
security and defense cooperation in such areas as ballistic missile
defense,
bilateral contingency planning, information sharing and intelligence
cooperation, and international peace cooperation activities, as well as
the
importance of improving interoperability of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces
and
U.S. forces to preclude duplication. This strong partnership is
increasingly
vital in meeting global challenges, the scope of security and defense
cooperation to ensure a robust alliance relationship, and to enhance
the
alliance’s capability to respond to diverse challenges in the evolving
regional
and global security environment. In other words, Japanese military must
now be
restructured to meet a global challenge, not just defense of Japanese
home land.
Shame trumps Guilt in
Japanese Geopolitical Agenda
Yet historically, Japan
has more scores to settle with the US
and its Western Allies than with China
and Korea,
North or South, or with any other state in Asia.
Japan-US
security alliance exposes Japan
unnecessarily to security threats. The threats Japan
faces from its Asian neighbors arise from the presence of US bases in Japan
from which US
aggression on Asian location could be launched. US bases in Japan
have evolved from purely defensive bases for the purpose of defending Japan
from attacks to offensive bases to support US military actions outside
of Japan.
Threats against Japan
would evaporate if offensive US
bases in Japan
are removed.
At the 1919 Paris Peace Conference,
Western victors rejected
the simple request from Japan,
a fellow victor ally, to have a racial equality clause included in the
League
of Nations Covenant. In 1924, The US passed the racist Japanese
Exclusion Act
to shut off Japanese immigration. The US
dropped two atomic bombs on Japan
which all Japanese viewed as unnecessary since a demonstration would
have
served the same purpose of ending the war. After the war, the US
dictated a curb on the spiritual legitimacy of the Japanese emperor.
These
unsettled scores with the US
are scars of national shame that Japan’s
Samurai culture is not likely to forget or forgive even in a millennium.
On the other hand Japan
suffers national guilt but not shame on its history with its Asian
neighbors.
This is significant point in Asian culture in which shame overwhelms
guilt in
determining behavior, in contrast to the Judeo-Christian West. The
cultural trumping
of guilt by shame explains the difference between Germany
and Japan
in
the two defeated nations’ attitude toward war crimes, with Germany
dealing with the issue with remorse while Japan
with denial. US
support of revival of Japanese militarism for short-term expediency has
the
potential of leading to the same blowback as its Cold War support of
extremist
Islamic fundamentalism against communism. The US
might have defeated Japan
in 1946, but it has not conquered the Japanese mind by a long shot.
Indeed, the back-handed praise lavished
by Bush on Japan that after its defeat by the US has become a democracy
and close
ally as a shining example of how US military intervention can bring
democracy
to the world is, explained Prof. Takeshi Inoguchi, international
relations
expert at Chuo University, “awkward and embarrassing for most Japanese
because
it carries so many nuances of the difficult past.”
Following the footsteps of Koizumi, Abe
considers the amendment to Article 9 of
the Japanese pacifist constitution as vital in freeing the Japanese
military to
participate in more “peacekeeping” mission globally. Like his maternal
grandfather Kishi in the 1950s, Abe understands that Japan
has no choice but to temporarily swallow its national pride to
cooperate with Washington,
only gradually moving towards more equality in sharing mutual interests
and
responsibilities. Yet a truly independent Japan as an Asian great power
would
sooner or later have more historical reckoning to settle with the US
than with
China or any other nation in Asia.
Thre Greater East Asian Co-prosperity Sphere
The Japanese war-time vision of a Greater East Asian
Co-prosperity Sphere was flawed only in its absence of ingenuity,
evidenced by
the de facto inequality offered to non-Japanese member nations. If the
vision had
not been a false front for Japanese imperialism but was true to the
slogans
such as “Asia for Asians”, “the liberation of Asian countries from
Western
imperialist powers” and “economic co-prosperity for member nations”, a
true
Asian enterprise as a forerunner of the European Union might have
evolved from
the vision without bloodshed and the Asian Century would have been
speeded up
and its emergence would be infinitely less torturous. Alas, the local
governments set up by Japanese occupation all turned out to be puppet
regimes carrying
out dictatorial orders from Tokyo and the Japanese conducted themselves
as
insufferable, haughty conquerors with disdain towards the local
population.
Copying French imperialism, Japan
imposed programs of “Japanization” with no tolerance or respect for
local culture.
Unlike post-war Germany
which managed to emerge as a political, economic and moral leader of
the new Europe,
Japan
has made
itself, at US urging, as the main obstacle to Asian unity and
solidarity, in
parallel to US
policy turning Israel
from a potentially positive force in the development of the Middle
East to a forward base of US
neo-imperialism. The Arabic nation would do well to welcome Israel
as a constructive component of a new Middle East
by
welcoming the return of the Jewish state as god’s gift to the region,
by
turning Israel’s
national interest to align with the interests of region rather than
with those
of the West. The fundamental geopolitical problem with Israel
is the Jewish state’s view of itself as a Western state in a
non-Western Middle East, in denial of its
oriental heritage. In that sense, Japan
and Israel
have
a similar problem of self denial of their indigenous roots to make
themselves
invasive alien elements in their own home regions.
Lessons of the Plaza
Accord
The lessons of the damages on the Japanese economy by the 1985
Plaza Accord and the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis force Abe to aim at
making the
Japanese economy more neo-liberal and global. In doing so, he is
committed to revive
Koizumi’s stalled reforms, to curb government spending, to privatize
the public
sector and to accommodate cross-border capital flow to increase foreign
direct
investment. However, it is not all together certain that neo-liberalism
is
suitable to Japanese socio-economic culture or that can provide
solutions to
Japan’s economic dilemma which had be caused in the first place by none
other
than neo-liberal onslaught under dollar hegemony. Still, Japanese
mentality is
not known for bold originality and it would be surprising if creative
new
concepts of economic revival would originate from Japan.
Unless current trends change, as US
influence in Asia declines, Japan
will decline with it.
For example, US investors and lenders require US-style
transparency and control that are incompatible with Japanese social
manners and
traditions. US-managed Japanese funds want only to make investments
based on narrow,
short-term economic rationality rather than on Japan’s
keiretsu long-term relationships. The intrusion of US-managed global
capital
would cause the very social chaos that Japanese politicians badly want
to
avoid.
This cultural conflict between Western-dominated
globalization and Asian traditions holds true throughout much of Asia,
including China.
Asia is unable to attract
sufficient global capital to
sustain its growth/recovery targets, unable to restructure its
economies to
generate that capital domestically because of the trap of export
dependency
under dollar hegemony, and unwillingness to allow an uncontrolled
influx of
US-managed global capital on non-Asian terms. Socially, the Confucian
ideal of personal
considerations and ritual relationships would be interpreted by Western
standards as collusion, or worse still as corruption. Politically,
Asian
leaders, including those in Japan,
are trapped between the economic demands of a Western-dominated global
system
and indigenous social traditions. They face policy paralysis resulting
from
conflicting pressures operating under incompatible value systems.
Inefficiencies continue, recovery aborted by externally imposed
economic
realities, and social tensions reach boiling points.
Relations with China and South
Korea
Simultaneously,
Abe must repair deteriorating relations with
China
and South Korea
while remaining unapologetic about Japan’s
militaristic and atrocious past that still divide Japanese public
opinion. Before
becoming premier, Abe defended visits to the Yasukuni Shrine by arguing
such
visits as matters of individual conviction regarding respect for Japan’s
war dead while avoiding further inflaming emotional diplomatic disputes
with Japan’s
victimized neighbors. Nationalism needed for successful domestic
politics in Japan
conflicts with Asian solidarity necessary for effective Japanese
foreign
policy.
At the time of his elective victory for the premiership in
September 2006, Abe enjoyed a high 70% popular support. Four months
later,
tarred by scandals that undermined confidence in his judgment and
diminished
his political capital, the support has fallen to as low as 39%, close
to the
dismal approval rating of George Bush. The coming April local elections
and the
July upper house elections pose an imminent threat to the political
life of Japan’s
youngest prime minister.
Towards A Beautiful
Nation
Abe published a book during his
campaign for prime minister
with the title: Toward a Beautiful Nation, a
bestseller in Japan,
in which he claims that Class A war criminals charged with crimes
against peace
were adjudicated in the Tokyo Tribunal after the war but were not war
criminals
in Japanese domestic law.
On September 29, 2006,
three days after his inauguration, Abe delivered his first
policy speech to a plenary session of the House of Representatives
emphasizing
his determination to promote his vision of “a beautiful nation” and to
continue
and accelerate the course of structural economic reform. He
outlined five policy targets: 1) constructing
an open economy full of vitality, 2) resolute implementation of fiscal
consolidation and administrative reform, 3) realizing a healthy and
safe
society, rebuilding education, and 4) shifting to proactive diplomacy.
Abe also laid out his plan for the formulation of a
long-term strategic guideline called “Innovation 25” aimed at the
creation of
innovation contributing to economic growth looking forward to the year
2025;
and the promotion of comprehensive “Challenge Again Assistance
Measures,”
including expanding the application of social insurance coverage to
part-time
workers; the deep reduction of expenditures aimed at minimizing the
financial
burden on taxpayers and the steady promotion of fundamental
administrative
reform to achieve simple yet efficient lean government; and the early
enactment
of a bill to revise the Fundamental Law of Education, the introduction
of
systems for the renewal of teaching licenses and the implementation of
external
assessment, and the establishment within the government of an
“Education
Rebuilding Council.”
Regarding revision of the Constitution, which he put forward
as an administration pledge during his campaign in the recent Liberal
Democratic Party presidential election, Abe declared his hope that a
national
referendum bill stipulating revision procedures would be enacted as
soon as
possible. Regarding Japan’s
exercise of the right of collective self-defense, which is currently
forbidden
by the Constitution, Abe attracted attention by indicating his
intention to
study specific cases.
“The vision I am aiming for,” Abe said
at the beginning of his speech, “is that of ‘a beautiful country, Japan’
- a country filled with vitality, opportunity, and compassion, which
cherishes
a spirit of self-discipline, and is open to the world.” He then cited
four
aspects of the “beautiful country, Japan” vision: (1) a country that
values
culture, tradition, history, and nature; (2) a country based on a free
society
that respects discipline and has dignity; (3) a country that continues
to
possess the vitality to grow toward the future; and (4) a country that
is
trusted, respected, and loved in the world and that demonstrates
leadership.
Abe’s vision of a beautiful nation
conflicts with the past
and present path of Japan
which has led Japan
to reject its “culture, tradition, history and nature”. The revival of
Japanese
militarism is not likely to win Japan
any “trust, respect or love in the world”, and instead of leadership,
it will
only generate resistance to renewed Japanese threat.
Referring to diplomacy and national security, Abe said, “I will
demonstrate the
‘Japan-US Alliance for Asia and the World’ even
further
and promote diplomacy that will actively contribute to stalwart
solidarity in Asia.”
He went on to declare that “the headquarters function of the Prime
Minister’s
Office [Kantei] will be reorganized and strengthened, and intelligence
gathering functions will also be enhanced” and “I will put in place a
framework
that ensures constant communication between the Prime Minister’s Office
and the
White House in order to consolidate the trust [between Japan and the
United
States].” Regarding relations with China
and South Korea,
he said that “it is essential to make mutual efforts so that we can
have
future-oriented, frank discussions with each other.” Regarding the North
Korea problem, he said, “There can be
no
normalization of relations between Japan
and North Korea
unless the abduction issue is resolved.” He also announced the
establishment of
a Headquarters on the Abduction Issue chaired by the prime minister.
With regard to exercise of the right to collective self-defense, Abe
said, “In
light of the changes in the international situation, such as the
proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction and missiles and the fight against
terrorism, as
well as the advancements in military technologies and the rising
expectations
toward Japan’s international contribution, we will thoroughly study
individual,
specific cases to identify what kind of case falls under the exercise
of the
right of collective self-defense, which is forbidden under the
Constitution, so
that the Japan-US alliance functions more effectively and peace is
maintained.”
According to the Yomiuri Shimbun (September 29, evening
edition), “Cases
that have been considered until now as the exercise of the right of
collective
self-defense will be studied individually. If a case is judged to fall
under
the right of individual self-defense, then it will be deemed to be
constitutional.”
It explained, “It is expected that cases will be studied that at
present are
deemed to constitute exercise of the right of collective self-defense,
for
example, the case in which a ship of the US Navy that is engaged in
joint
action with the Maritime Self-Defense Force undergoes a missile attack,
and a
MSDF ship located one kilometer away counterattacks.”
In his conclusion, Abe quoted the words of Albert Einstein who, when
visiting Japan,
said, “It is my sincere wish that the Japanese people keep intact and
never
forget those traits which you have intrinsically possessed: humbleness
and
simplicity essential to an individual, pure and calm Japanese heart.”
Abe
commented, “I believe it is fully possible to build a 21st century Japan
which retains the Japanese virtues which Einstein admired and is filled
with
charm and vitality. I believe that the Japanese people have the ability
to
achieve this.”
In a commentary analyzing Abe’s speech, the Mainichi
Shimbun (September 30) warned that “the flood of newly created
bodies and
the formulation of policies by the Kantei will take away authority from
the
ministries and agencies, so resistance can be expected.” The
Mainichi added,
“Effectiveness looks likely to be the issue.”
In his policy speech, Abe left out such expressions from his LDP
presidential
election campaign as “breaking away from the postwar framework” and
“open
conservatism” that seem to reflect his ideological bent. The Yomiuri
(September
29, evening edition) commented: “He seems to have been aware of the
eyes of
other countries.” It went on, “Abe, who is treated as a nationalist by
some
foreign newspapers, apparently was forced to dilute his conservative
standpoint
and proclaim himself to be an ordinary politician who loves country,
community,
and family.”
Opposition parties expectedly were all critical of the
speech. Naoto Kan,
deputy leader of the Democratic Party of Japan, said, “Abstract words
were
bandied about, but the substance was extremely vague.” Mizuho
Fukushima, leader
of the Social Democratic Party, commented, “There were many foreign
buzzwords
and images but no substance.” Kazuo Shii, leader of the Japanese
Communist
Party, said, “It was a step toward building a nation that conducts war
overseas. The important point is that he stated clearly that studies
would be
made to join the United States
in war.”
At a press conference shortly after his inauguration in
September 2006, the new premier made it clear that Japan,
as an Asian country, attached great importance to its Asian diplomacy
and was
willing to further strengthen relations with neighbors such as China,
South Korea
and
Russia.
Describing China
as an important country in Japanese foreign policy, Abe stated that China’s
peaceful development is conducive to peace and prosperity in Asia
and he would restart immediate efforts to improve bilateral relations.
In follow-up speeches in parliamentary hearings, Abe pointed
out it was vital to reopen summit meetings with China
and South Korea
and to conduct candid dialogue. He also pledged to promote all-round
exchanges
and cooperation in all fields with China
and South Korea,
in order to build up future-oriented relations with the two countries
on the
basis of mutual understanding and trust. The new premier showed
positive
attitude toward historical issues, acknowledging that Japanese invasion
and
colonization during WWII inflicted bitter sufferings by the peoples and
heavy
damages in property in many countries, especially Asian countries, and
reaffirmed Japan’s
acceptance of the ruling of the Far East Military Tribunal on war
crimes. Abe’s
foreign policy pronouncements contradict his domestic campaign rhetoric.
Good Beginning with China
In the second week in office, Abe made an official visit to China,
making himself the first postwar Japanese prime minister who chose China
for the maiden diplomatic tour. President Hu Jingtao described Abe’s
visit as
“a turning point in China-Japan relations” and expressed hope it would
also
serve as a new starting point for better relations. Premier Wen Jiabao
said
that a “window of hope” has been opened.
In a joint communiqué issued during
Abe’s trip to China, the
two governments agrees to continue to abide by the principles of the
Sino-Japanese Joint Statement of September 29, 1972, Article 3 of which
states:
“The government of the People's Republic of China reiterates that
Taiwan is an
inalienable part of the territory of the People's Republic of China.
The
government of Japan fully understands and respects this position of the
government of the People's Republic of China, and shall firmly abide by
the
principles under Article 8 in the Potsdam Proclamation”; the
Sino-Japanese
Treaty of Peace and Friendship of 1978 and the Sino-Japanese Joint
Declaration
of 1998 on Building a Partnership of
Friendship and Cooperation for Peace and Development. The two
sides also
agreed to squarely face history and be oriented towards the future.
The communiqué states that the two countries would properly
deal with problems affecting the development of bilateral ties and
promote
bilateral relations through expanding both political and economic
links. Both
sides agree to make efforts to build a mutually beneficial relationship
based
on common strategic interests and to realize the goals of peaceful
coexistence,
long-lasting friendship, mutually beneficial cooperation and common
development.
Abe's China
tour earned him credit at home. Akihiro Ota, president of Japan’s
junior ruling coalition party the New Komeito, spoke highly of Abe's
visit to China,
expressing the hope that two countries would further strengthen the
mutual
understanding.
<>Mizuho Fukushima, secretary general of the Social Democratic
Party, said she hoped Abe’s visit to China
could be a positive turning point in bilateral ties.
Abe’s gesture was ardently welcomed by the Japanese economic
sector, which hope for sound political relations with China,
Japan's
largest
trade partner, so that Japanese firms can operate under more favorable
circumstances. Kakutaro Kitashiro, chairman of the Japan Association of
Corporate
Executive, expressed hope that summits between the two countries would
be
arranged on a regular basis and bilateral economic relationship further
developed.
Abe’s visit to China
reinvigorated the stalled Sino-Japanese relationship. Sustaining
hard-won amity
would require continued efforts from both sides. Xu Dunxin, former
Chinese
ambassador to Japan
from 1993 to 1998, was “prudently optimistic” about the prospects of
China-Japan
relations, but he warned Abe’s visit cannot resolve all the problems in
bilateral ties as they are complicated and protracted.
In a recent exclusive interview with Xinhua, the official
news agency of China,
Abe reiterated his judgment that Japan-China bilateral ties are of
great
significance, and preserving and strengthening of friendship between
the two
countries are vital to peace and development of the region and the
world at
large. More potential of the relations is yet to be exploited, Abe
said, adding
that China’s development means opportunities for Japan and he is
willing to
make efforts to further promote the bilateral ties. On August 4, 2006, less than two
months before he
was elected prime minister on September 26, Japanese media reported
that Abe
had visited the Yasukuni Shrine in April that year. Abe claimed the
visit was
of a personal and non-official nature. As
prime minister, Abe visited a Shinto shrine
on New Year Day, but stayed away controversial Yasukuni war shrine in
what
domestic media said was an effort to appease neo-conservative
supporters
without raising tension abroad.
And on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit in Cebu,
the Philippines
in mid-January 2007, Abe met with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao which led
to Wen’s
indication that Beijing is
willing
to cooperate in resolving the issue of Japanese nationals abducted by North
Korea. This is a breakthrough for
Abe’s
diplomacy. Yet North Korean response in the latest six-party talks in
Bejing on
February threatened progress on this issue. Wen also agreed to visit Japan
in April, 2007, the first by a Chinese premier in seven years. Neither Japan
nor China
brought up the thorny issue of visits by Japanese leaders to Yasukuni
Shrine.
The lack of discussion, however, also means the issue remains prickly
while
both side are trying to avoid escalation on a sensitive issue in the
domestic
politics in both countries.
However, a Chinese Foreign Ministry source has confidently
stated that “Abe will not visit Yasukuni as long as he is prime
minister.” Behind that sure pronouncement
was the
assumption that not only would Abe visit China
again, but Chinese President Hu Jintao would also come to Japan.
The Chinese source said,
“Abe is not
likely to say he won't visit Yasukuni. But that's all right as long as
the net
result is that he does not visit Yasukuni. There has never been a time
with so
many scheduled mutual visits by Japanese and Chinese leaders. The
visits are
the symbols of friendship.”
Still, Wen also indicated China
had not changed its fundamental stance on history. Abe, meanwhile,
after
pressing the reset button on Japan-China ties with his visit to Beijing
in October, 2006, has voiced criticism of China
during the prime minister’s recent European travels. Abe’s diplomatic
strategy
aims to minimize friction with Beijing
through bilateral talks and contact, while exploiting Japanese affinity
to
Western values to keep pressure on China.
In Europe,
Abe
repeatedly pushed three items: North Korean nuclear weapons
development, the
abduction issue and Japan’s
concerns with China’s
military modernization with opposition to lifting the EU ban on weapons
exports
to China
imposed
in the aftermath of the Tiananmen incident since 1989.
In recent days, China
has related to Japan
that the anticipated state visit by Hu to Tokyo
may not take place in 2007 as planned, signally Chinese reservation
regarding
Abe’s true agenda. Ignoring popular opposition at home, Abe while in Europe
endorsed Bush’s controversial new plan of troop surge war-torn Iraq.
Next: Hope for the
Stalled Six-Nation Talks over North Korea
Nuclear Issue
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