Barely
half a year into his premiership, Japan’s Shinzo Abe
is provoking anger across Asia and mixed feelings in
his country’s key ally, the United States. But will
the Bush administration use its influence to nudge Abe
away from inflammatory behavior?
Abe’s
predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, was a mold-breaking
leader, reviving Japan’s economy, reforming the
postal savings system, and smashing the long-ruling
Liberal Democratic Party’s faction system. But
Koizumi also legitimized a new Japanese nationalism,
antagonizing China and South Korea by his annual
visits to the Yasukuni Shrine. If anything, Abe is
even more committed to building an assertive and
unapologetic Japan.
Anyone
who believes that the Yasukuni controversy is an
obscure historical matter that Chinese and Koreans use
to badger Japan for political advantage has probably
never spent much time there. The problem is not the 12
Class-A war criminals interred at the shrine; the real
problem is the Yushukan military museum next door.
Walking
past the Mitsubishi Zero, tanks, and machine guns on
display in the museum, one finds a history of the
Pacific War that restores “the Truth of Modern
Japanese History.” It follows the nationalist
narrative: Japan, a victim of the European colonial
powers, sought only to protect the rest of Asia from
them. Japan’s colonial occupation of Korea, for
example, is described as a “partnership”; one
looks in vain for any account of the victims of
Japanese militarism in Nanjing or Manila.
One
might be able to defend the museum as one viewpoint
among many in a pluralist democracy. But there is no
other museum in Japan that gives an alternative view
of Japan’s twentieth-century history. Successive
Japanese governments have hidden behind the Yushukan
museum’s operation by a private religious
organization to deny responsibility for the views
expressed there.
That
is an unconvincing stance. In fact, unlike Germany,
Japan has never come to terms with its own
responsibility for the Pacific War. Although socialist
Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama officially apologized
to China in 1995 for the war, Japan has never had a
genuine internal debate over its degree of
responsibility, and has never made a determined effort
to propagate an alternative account to that of
Yushukan.
My
exposure to the Japanese right came in the early
1990’s, when I was on a couple of panels in Japan
with Watanabe Soichi, who was selected by my Japanese
publisher (unbeknownst to me) to translate my book The
End of History and the Last Man into Japanese.
Watanabe, a professor at Sophia University, was a
collaborator of Shintaro Ishihara, the nationalist
politician who wrote The Japan That Can Say No and is
now the governor of Tokyo.
In
the course of a couple of encounters, I heard him
explain in front of large public audiences how the
people of Manchuria had tears in their eyes when the
occupying Kwantung Army left China, so grateful were
they to Japan. According to Watanabe, the Pacific War
boiled down to race, as the US was determined to keep
a non-white people down. Watanabe is thus the
equivalent of a Holocaust denier, but, unlike his
German counterparts, he easily draws large and
sympathetic audiences. (I am regularly sent books by
Japanese writers that “explain” how the Nanjing
Massacre was a big fraud.)
Moreover,
there have been several disturbing recent incidents in
which physical intimidation has been used by
nationalists against critics of Koizumi’s Yasukuni
visits, such as the firebombing of former prime
ministerial candidate Kato Koichi’s home. (On the
other hand, the publisher of the normally conservative
Yomiuri Shimbun attacked Koizumi’s Yasukuni visits
and published a fascinating series of articles on
responsibility for the war.)
This
leaves the US in a difficult position. A number of
American strategists are eager to ring China with a
NATO-like defensive barrier, building outward from the
US-Japan Security Treaty. Since the final days of the
Cold War, the US has been pushing Japan to rearm, and
has officially supported a proposed revision of
Article 9 of the postwar constitution, which bans
Japan from having a military or waging war.
But
America should be careful about what it wishes for.
The legitimacy of the entire American military
position in the Far East is built around the US
exercising Japan’s sovereign function of
self-defense. Japan’s unilateral revision of Article
9, viewed against the backdrop of its new nationalism,
would isolate Japan from virtually the whole of Asia.
Revising
Article 9 has long been part of Abe’s agenda, but
whether he pushes ahead with it will depend in large
part on the kind of advice he gets from close friends
in the US. President Bush was unwilling to say
anything about Japan’s new nationalism to his
“good friend Junichiro” out of gratitude for
Japanese support in Iraq. Now that Japan has withdrawn
its small contingent of troops, perhaps Bush will
speak plainly to Abe.
Francis
Fukuyama is Dean of the School of Advanced
International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, and
Chairman of The American Interest.
Copyright:
Project Syndicate/The American Interest, 2007.
www.project-syndicate.org