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The
Chrysanthemum and the
Dragon
By Conn
Hallinan
(Posted with permission from Foreign Policy in Focus)
At first glance, the growing tension
between China and Japan seems almost inexplicable.
Massive anti-Japanese demonstrations in China over
events that took place more than half a century
ago? A heated exchange filled with mutual threats
over an offshore petroleum field that Western oil
companies think is not worth exploiting? Have a
Shinto shrine and slanted textbooks really driven
the two great Asian powers to the edge of a Cold
War or worse?
No. While history does play
a role in all this, if one wants to understand the
antagonism between Beijing and Tokyo, one has to
start in Washington and, in particular, Washington
state. In mid-April of this year, the Japanese
government agreed to let the US Army's 1st Corps
transfer from Fort Lewis, Washington, to Camp Zama
near Yokohama.
US troops in Japan are
nothing new. Some 50,000 of them are spread among
73 bases on the main islands and Okinawa, and the
Japanese shell out US$2.6 billion yearly to keep
them there. But American troops in Japan,
according to the US-Japan security treaty, are
supposed to maintain "peace and security in the
Far East". Period. However, the 1st Corps'
responsibility extends beyond the Pacific Basin to
include the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf,
through which passes the bulk of the oil that
supplies China's roaring economy.
Besides
the recent decision to re-deploy the 1st Corps,
the US is busily building up Guam as a "power
projection hub", with, in the words of Pacific
Commander Admiral William Fargo, "geostrategic
importance". The US is also trying to shift
Guam-based bombers to Yokota airbase near Tokyo.
Christopher Hughes of Warwick University, an
expert on the region, told the (British) Guardian,
"The ramifications of this would be that Japan
would essentially serve as a frontline US command
post for the Asia-Pacific and beyond."
That "frontline" is heating up
considerably. Earlier this year Central
Intelligence Agency director Porter Goss and
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told Congress
that China constitutes a "military threat" to the
US. The testimony appears to signal a decision by
the George W Bush administration to institute a
policy of "encircling" China with bases and US
alliances. The most obvious moves in this
direction are the recent ones involving beefing up
personnel and bases in Asia. But the US has also
tightened its control of Gulf oil through its
occupation of Iraq and is extending its influence
into Central Asia, a growing source for China's
energy needs.
The Chinese are acutely
sensitive to issues concerning their borders, and
Taiwan in particular, but what has really put them
on edge is a recent statement by the right-wing
mayor of Tokyo, Shintaro Ishihara, that "the US,
Russia and Japan" should work together to strangle
China's oil supplies. "It would keep China in
check greatly," he said, "since China has no
resources."
It would also turn the present
tensions in East Asia from worrisome to downright
scary. It is in light of these moves that the
recent spat over textbooks, a Shinto temple, and
offshore oil fields needs to be seen.
Disputed history The issue of
distorted history books and the visits by Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi to the Yasukuni Shrine
- where 14 class-A war criminals are deified -
enrages not only the Chinese, but every country in
the region that suffered under Japanese
colonialism. The textbooks in question ignore or
downplay Japan's colonial policy, including the
infamous Naming massacre in China and the issue of
"comfort women" forced into prostitution for the
Japanese army.
The drive to cleanse Japan
of its actions in World War II is led by the
Society for Historical Textbook Reform, backed by
industrial giants Canon and Mitsubishi and more
than 100 members of parliament from the ruling
Liberal Democratic Party. As Mark Seldon and David
McNeill of Japan Focus point out, not only have
the textbooks allowed an "extremist fringe" to put
its version of history into homes across Japan,
but the campaign has pushed other texts "sharply
to the right".
Fujioka Nobukastsu,
vice-chair of the society, said, "We're confident
that we can change the teaching of history in
schools here." It is a process that seems to be
having an effect. In a recent commentary in the
Financial Times, David Wall of Cambridge
University wrote that in his seminar on East Asian
politics, "Japanese students, and even junior
diplomats, laugh at Chinese students' accounts of
the massacre and other atrocities, saying the
stories were Chinese government fabrications and
pure propaganda."
Many Japanese, however,
oppose this ratcheting up of tensions with China.
Naoto Kan, the leader of the main opposition
Democratic Party of Japan, warned about seeing
China as "a military threat". Yotaro Kobayashi,
chair of Fuji-Xerox, has asked that Koizumi stop
visiting the Yasukuni Shrine, a request echoed by
the head of the Japan Association of Corporate
Executives and chairman of IBM, Kakutaro
Kitashiro. It is no coincidence that business
leaders are prominent among those calling for a
reduction in tensions. China constitutes 20.1% of
Japan's foreign trade, slightly more than $213
billion last year.
What critics of
Japanese nationalism fear is that the memories of
World War II, and the enormous pain and damage the
war inflicted on Asia and Japan, are receding. And
the further they recede, the more Japan is willing
to flex its military muscle. Japan has the
fifth-largest navy in the world, the 15th-largest
air force, and a military budget close to $40
billion. The government recently elevated its
Defense Agency to a full ministry.
Japan
has also signed onto the American Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) system and will spend $10 billion
deploying it over the next decade. While the
United States and Japan claim that the ABM is
aimed at North Korea, the Chinese view it as a
threat to their small, strategic nuclear force.
Meanwhile, the US is pressuring Japan to
dump Article 9 of its "peace constitution", which
renounces war as a "sovereign right of the nation"
and "force as a means of settling international
disputes". It also bars Japanese troops from any
"combat zones". When the Koizumi government sent
500 troops to Iraq, it circumvented the ban by
simply declaring Iraq a "non-combat zone".
Japan's global role Last year,
then-secretary of state Colin Powell bluntly told
the Financial Times, "If Japan is going to play a
full role on the world stage and become a full,
active member of the [United Nations] Security
Council, Article 9 of the Japanese constitution
will have to be re-examined." A recent poll by
Mainichi Shimbum indicated that 70% of the Diet,
or parliament, was opposed to altering the
constitution or dumping Article 9.
Japan
has become increasingly aggressive with its
neighbors. It recently claimed Korea's Tokodo
Islands, setting off huge demonstrations in South
Korea. Japan began its colonial career by seizing
the islands from Korea in 1905 and renaming them
Yakeshima. The islands were returned to Korea in
1945.
The Koizumi government is picking
fights with China as well, including taking
control of a lighthouse first established by
right-wing nationalists on Diaoyu Island. China
called the action a "provocation against, and an
intrusion into territorial sovereignty".
Japan also exchanged sharp notes with
Beijing over the disputed offshore Chunxiao
oilfield. A Japanese official told the Financial
Times that Tokyo was pursuing "proportional
escalation" over the fields. "If they do
something, then we will do something until they
understand our determination," he said.
Yet it is not even obvious that there is
much to argue over. Last year Royal Dutch Shell,
the Anglo-Dutch Oil Group, and Unocal withdrew
from developing the fields because the companies
said there wasn't enough oil or gas to merit it.
So what's going on here?
Japanese
nationalism is nothing new, and it appears that at
least a section of Japan's political classes has
decided the best way to confront the growing power
and influence of China is to sign on to US designs
for the region. But is Japan also laying the
groundwork for a step that would have been
unthinkable a generation ago: acquiring nuclear
weapons?
In 2002, Japan's then-chief
cabinet secretary, Yasur Fukuda, said Japan was
considering abandoning its long-term opposition to
nuclear weapons. In the face of Korean and Chinese
alarm, the government disavowed the statement, but
it is not the first time government officials have
raised the subject. The United States has tacitly
supported such talk.
Both Vice President
Dick Cheney and Senator John McCain have warned
China that if North Korea developed nuclear
weapons, it was likely that Japan would do so too.
A number of Bush administration sounding boards,
such as neo-conservative Charles Krauthammer, have
openly advocated Japan going nuclear as a way to
offset the growing influence and power of China.
Acquiring nuclear weapons would be relatively easy
for Japan, which has plenty of fuel to reprocess,
as well as missiles and satellite targeting
systems.
It has been 50 years since atomic
weapons destroyed two Japanese cities and killed
more than 200,000 people, and these memories are
growing dim for a new generation of Japanese.
Memory charts a path to avoid the mistakes of the
past. Amnesia condemns they be repeated.
Conn Hallinan is a foreign
policy analyst for Foreign Policy In Focus and a
lecturer in journalism at the University of
California, Santa Cruz.
(Posted with
permission from Foreign Policy in Focus) |
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