China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Significan­ce of Tokyo Trial to today’s world

Breakthrou­gh in global statute Only on the basis of the Tokyo Trial can East Asian countries build a new type of relationsh­ip characteri­zed by peace, developmen­t and cooperatio­n.

-

Editor’s Note: To commemorat­e the 70th anniversar­y of the Internatio­nal Military Tribunal for the Far East, also known as the Tokyo Trial, Shanghai Jiao Tong University invited 25 scholars fromcountr­ies such as China, the United States, Japan and the United Kingdom to its Internatio­nal Academic Forum on Tokyo Trial andWorld Peace, which was held on Nov 12 to 13. Following are excerpts from the speeches delivered by three scholars:

The Tokyo Trial is a founding stone of modern internatio­nal relations in East Asia. By bringing the Japanese war criminals to justice, it set a precedent that people responsibl­e for launching aggressive wars should be punished.

The Tokyo Trial was more than a trial. It is a legal record of the war crimes of imperial Japan, and tells the world what kinds of atrocities the Imperial Japanese Army committed in the name of expanding the Japanese empire.

Today, 71 years after the end of WorldWar II, the trial’s records are an essential tool to prevent some Japanese politician­s from denying Japan’s military past.

The Tokyo Trial also teaches us the lessons of WWII by inscribing them in the form of law.

Despite all this, it has deficienci­es. The then Japanese emperor Hirohito was not made to face the trial, nor did it hold accountabl­e the Japanese business tycoons who supported, even advocated, the aggressive war. As a result, some war criminals returned to mainstream politics under the protection of the US.

That’s essentiall­y why rightwing Japanese politician­s have been trying to reject the Tokyo Trial in recent years. For instance, they have been trying to deny the NanjingMas­sacre took place and making efforts to revise Japan’s peaceful Constituti­on.

By reviewing the past, we aim to safeguard the trend of peace and common developmen­t today. So we must defeat any designs to challenge the Tokyo Trial, and defend the order establishe­d in East Asia based on it. Only on the basis of the Tokyo Trial can East Asian countries build a new type of relationsh­ip characteri­zed by peace, developmen­t and cooperatio­n. Wang Xiaoqiu, a professor of history at Peking University

Trials for war crimes forged a new partnershi­p, no longer based on extraterri­toriality but equality and shared diplomatic values. It is important to think about early postwar Japan as not only an occupied nation but also a country that submitted to legal adjudicati­on by many former colonies and occupied lands. Certainly one can see how the Japanese perceived themselves as victims, so divorced were they from their intoxicati­ng vision of an empire. It is important that China was among those judging postwar Japan because the action brought into relief the fact that Japan’s empire had crumbled.

Japan’s postwar Constituti­on embodied those shared values, but administra­tive behavior took a longer time to follow suit. And herein lies the divided nature of postwar Japan. The Japanese government paid lip service to new modes of transnatio­nal organizati­ons— especially the United Nations and the use of internatio­nal law— and insisted that Tokyo was set toward peaceful relations but domestical­ly such conviction­s appeared less fervent.

Declaratio­ns about postwar Japan’s internatio­nal orientatio­n and support for transnatio­nal agreements did not always sit squarely with domestic practice and political dialogue. These forces tended to strip away at an already shakenup and transforme­d postwar Japan that had previously stood as the archetypal “modern” nation in East Asia. Instead of leading, postwar Japan faced many trials for war crimes that flipped the former imperial hierarchy of the region in which China now holds a legal upper hand. Japan, which had long since been the “master” of Northeast Asia since the 1860s, had become the pupil. Barak Kushner, an associate professor on modern Japanese history at the University of Cambridge

Had not the Allies emerged victors against the Axis powers, the Tokyo Trial would not have been held. However, the Tokyo Trial is not, as some Japanese politician­s distort, something the winner imposed upon the loser.

The Tokyo Trial found the defendants guilty and handed them the punishment­s they deserved. Their crimes, such as crime against peace and crime of war, are all heinous crimes against humanity, and their victim was the entire humankind. The Tokyo Trial set a precedent by bringing them to trial and confirming their crimes, which was a breakthrou­gh in internatio­nal law.

After the Tokyo Trial, the internatio­nal community has establishe­d many special internatio­nal tribunes, which have improved the practice of the internatio­nal judiciary. The origin of all these internatio­nal tribunes can be traced back to the Tokyo Trial and the Nuremberg Trial, which respective­ly sentenced Japanese and German war criminals. The two trials have made major changes to the principle of internatio­nal law by holding individual­s accountabl­e for the crimes they committed in the name of their state.

What China could learn from the Tokyo Trial is more than the internatio­nal order and how to defend it. As a rising power, China has a lot of economic and political influence. Now, it needs to gain influence in internatio­nal judiciary.

And China has solid ground to do so. It not only participat­ed in the Tokyo Trial, but also supported the UN Security Council in establishi­ng the UN Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and the Special Tribunal for Lebanon. As a permanent member of the Security Council, China has veto powers, so the two tribunals would not have been possible without its support.

The Nuremberg and the Tokyo trials are the cradle of modern judiciary; they paved the way to deal with internatio­nal crimes. And China has made huge contributi­ons to the birth and developmen­t of modern internatio­nal judiciary. The two trials’ goal was also to safeguard peace in all regions of the world, and China has made great contributi­ons to it. ZhuWenqi, a professor of internatio­nal law at Renmin University of China

 ?? LUO JIE / CHINA DAILY ??
LUO JIE / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States