China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Abe on a pretentiou­s remorse visit toHawaii

Chinese people deserve a proper apology from a sitting Japanese leader for what the Imperial Japanese Army did in Nanjing and elsewhere in China. So do those in many other Asian countries ...

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Aseries of commemorat­ive events have been held inNanjing, East China’s Jiangsu province, ahead of theNationa­l Memorial Day forNanjing­Massacre Victims on Tuesday, with many people mourning the deaths of relatives who were killed in the massacre.

More than 300,000 Chinese citizens fell victim to the invading Japanese troops inNanjing from December 1937 to January 1938. But Japanese PrimeMinis­ter Shinzo Abe does not seem to be bothered that Japan is yet to offer a sincere apology to the neighborin­g countries that were occupied and terrorized by Japan before and duringWorl­dWar II. Instead, he has decided to visit PearlHarbo­r on Dec 26 withUS President Barack Obama 75 years after Japan launched an attack on Hawaii.

But Abe’s visit toHawaii— the first by a Japanese leader to Pearl Harbor since the end ofWorld War II— is about “consoling the souls of those who died in the war”, not to apologize for Japan’s wartime crimes, Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga has said. Which means Abe is not likely to apologize for the attack onHawaii that killed more than 2,000US citizens.

His apology-free trip toHawaii offers a glimpse into the prevailing, yet false reading of history among a slewof Japanese leaders that owning up to the country’s wartime past is not necessary, which contradict­s the much-touted Japanese “noble and precious” values of liberty, democracy and the rule of law.

Refusing to face up to the country’s wartime past will not absolve Japanese leaders of their responsibi­lities. Rather, it will call into question their credibilit­y. The irony is, the globally respected principle of liberty, democracy and the rule of lawis the result of the collapse of fascism and its once-dedicated followers— Japan, Germany and Italy.

In the case of PearlHarbo­r, Japan launched a war against the United States. Their engagement, however, was basically on an equal footing given their comparativ­e military strength and geopolitic­al influence at the time. In contrast, what Japan unleashed on China and its people was sheer terror since China was much weaker then. And the most tragic example of that terror was the slaughter of more than 300,000 Chinese people inNanjing, which was not only an immoral but also irredeemab­le crime.

If Abe could express “deep remorse” over the Japanese military’s atrocities to theUS and visit PearlHarbo­r in the name of “reconcilia­tion”, he should have had done the same to China a long time ago. Unfortunat­ely, he did not and has no intention to do so, let alone pay a visit toNanjing.

Chinese people deserve a proper apology from a sitting Japanese leader for what the Imperial Japanese Army did inNanjing and elsewhere in China. So do those in many other Asian countries, which, as Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said onWednesda­y, are available for Japan to offer condolence­s to victims of its wartime atrocities. Their request is by no means about “playing the history card”.

In fact, there have been heartfelt reflection­s of Japan’s wartime past by many Japanese, including former prime minister Yukio Hatoyama. AlthoughHa­toyama did not visitNanji­ng while in office due to domestic pressures, he went to the Chinese city to express his deep repentance for the notorious massacre after his term in office.

Just one month ago he apologized again for Japan’s bombardmen­t of Southwest China’s Chongqing from 1938 to 1944, which left more than 30,000 people dead or injured, and criticized Abe for playing up the “China threat” theory.

But his criticism of Tokyo’s distorted views on history drew fierce opposition, even insults, at home, casting a shadow over the promotion of the “freedom of speech” in Japan. Reconcilia­tion is called for, but it is only possible if the incumbent Japanese administra­tion stops playing word games and reiterates its promise to avoid repeating “the horrors of war”. The author is a professor of Japanese studies at China Foreign Affairs University.

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