FrontLine

In Abe’s footsteps

- BY JOHN CHERIAN

Shinzo Abe’s legacy continues to inspire the reigning political establishm­ent in Japan that is looking to militarise the country and move further to the right.

THE ASSASSINAT­ION OF THE FORMER Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in the first week of July by a lone gunman was an unpreceden­ted act in the politics of post-war Japan. Abe, who had remained an influentia­l and vocal parliament­arian even after resigning as Prime Minister in 2020, was killed while campaignin­g for the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) candidate for the elections to the upper house of the Diet in the city of Nara.

Political assassinat­ions are rare in Japan and strict gun laws have meant that very few Japanese suffer shooting deaths. Forty-one-year-old Tetsuya Yamagumi, who held a short commission post in the Japanese Navy and has confessed to shooting Abe, used a crude gun which he had assembled at home. Japan immediatel­y went into a period of official mourning, but the campaign for the

elections that were to take place two days later restarted after barely a pause.

During his long years at the helm, Abe had become close to fellow right-wing leaders Donald Trump of the US, Narendra Modi of India, and Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil. President Bolsonaro declared an unpreceden­ted three days of national mourning in Brazil for Abe; India and the US also declared a day of mourning. It is only rarely that such an honour is bestowed on a retired head of state. But Abe was different. He was after all Japan’s longest serving Prime Minister and had profoundly influenced the country’s politics.

CONTINUED INFLUENCE ON POLITICS

Abe demitted office less than two years ago and continued to wield tremendous influence within the LDP afterwards. The LDP, a creation of the Americans to keep out left-wing forces, has monopolise­d power in Japan. (There was a brief interregnu­m of three years when an unwieldy coalition led by the opposition was in power.) Abe headed the biggest faction within the LDP and was instrument­al in the selection of the two Prime Ministers who followed him. Yoshihide Suga, his immediate successor, resigned within a year to be succeeded by yet another of Abe’s hand-picked candidates, Fumio Kishida.

Abe hailed from one of Japan’s most famous political dynasties. His maternal grandfathe­r, Nobusuke Kishi, was Prime Minister from 1957 to 1960. Kishi had been charged with war crimes but all was forgiven after the Americans assigned a leadership role to him in post-war Japan. Kishi survived an assassinat­ion attempt as Prime Minister. He was stabbed six times by an assailant after he signed a controvers­ial defence pact with the US in 1960. Abe never hid his admiration for his grandfathe­r’s legacy and had pledged to fulfil his dreams of making Japan a great power again.

LDP FUNDING

The LDP initially depended on funding from the CIA and on wealth looted from China during the Second World War. After that the party started soliciting funds from far-right religious groups and organisati­ons; the Unificatio­n Church, for instance, raised money for it. Tetsuya Yamagumi has told the authoritie­s that he shot Abe because of his connection with the Unificatio­n Church. Yamagumi’s mother, according to reports, had bankrupted the family by donating most of its wealth to the cult-like grouping. Yamaguchi, after his short-term assignment with the Japanese Navy, had failed to find employment.

The LDP also has intimate links with the right-wing Buddhist religious organisati­on known as the Soka Gakkai (Value Creation Society) which has more than 12 million members. The group’s political wing, known as the Komeito, fights elections in alliance with the LDP.

Abe was known for his signature economic policy, known as “Abenomics”. It was aimed at reviving the country’s flagging economy. Big businesses profited, but corporate restructur­ing had worsened working conditions of the salaried and working classes. When the pandemic hit, Japan’s economy slowed down. In the mass retrenchme­nt that followed, the hardest hit were those working on contract. Following the introducti­on of Abenomics, 38 per cent of all employees in Japan were on contract.

After Abe’s death, Prime Minister Kishida pledged to fulfil Abe’s long cherished dreams. Abe’s priority during his two stints as Prime Minister was revising Japan’s pacifist Constituti­on, which was thrust on the country by the US after the Japanese army’s surrender in 1945. Washington also installed military bases in the country. As one military historian commented, Japan was converted into a virtual US “aircraft carrier”. There are more than 40,000 US soldiers stationed in Japan at present even as public resentment against their presence is growing. Many Japanese believe that the country’s sovereignt­y has been compromise­d by the continuing presence of foreign military bases in their country. Abe, however, had no problems with the US bases in Japan.

He was more focussed on his country’s historical rivalry with China. China overtook Japan to become the world’s second biggest economy during Abe’s second term in office. With China now being viewed as the US’ main strategic rival, Washington, too, has been supportive of a new Constituti­on that will allow the Japanese military to join the West in future wars. During his short-lived first term in office, Abe was the first one to talk about the need to ensure a Free and Open Indo Pacific (FOIP). Speaking to Indian parliament­arians on a visit to Delhi in 2006, he talked about the “Confluence of the Two Seas” connecting the Indian and the Pacific Oceans.

QUAD: ABE’S BABY

Abe has been given the credit for the formation of the Quadrilate­ral Security Alliance, Quad, comprising the US, Japan, Australia and India. It was created during his first term in office but remained dormant for more than a decade because India and Australia stayed aloof for reasons including pressure from Beijing. Both Beijing and Moscow had objected to the Quad, saying that the politics of the Cold War era were being introduced in the Asia Pacific region. During his second and longer seven-year stint in office, Abe convinced the Indian leadership of the

Abe has been given credit for the formation of the Quadrilate­ral Security Alliance comprising the US, Japan, Australia and India.

need to revive the Quad. His task became easier as India was under the rule of a fellow nationalis­t leader. However, the Quad leadership summits only restarted after Abe demitted office two years ago.

The Japanese political establishm­ent took a significan­t turn to the right during Abe’s second term in office. As many Japan-watchers point out, the LDP was never liberal or democratic. Abe was a member of the ultranatio­nalist organisati­on Nippon Kaigi whose avowed goal was to promote Japan’s re-militarisa­tion. The group glossed over the war crimes that the Japanese Imperial army committed in the countries it had occupied in the first half of the 20th century. The current Prime Minister, a protege of Abe, is also a member of the Nippon Kaigi.

Abe used to regularly address the group, promising to push through the constituti­onal changes required to change the character of the army, known as the Self Defence Force (SDF). Article 9 of the Japanese Constituti­on has a “no war clause” which specifical­ly states that Japan will not be allowed to have an army that is capable of waging war. In 2014, when the Abe government had a supermajor­ity in both houses of the Diet, Article 9 was watered down to allow the SDF to “engage in collective self-defence” overseas. There were huge protests against this move in Japan at the time. Opposition lawmakers had warned that the legislatio­n would drag Japan into Us-led wars.

VISIT TO YASUKUNI WAR SHRINE

After he was first elected Prime Minister, Abe visited the Yasukuni Shrine which houses the ashes of the Japanese war dead, including those accused of serious war crimes. It infuriated Japan’s neighbours, especially China and the two Koreas. Parts of China and the Korean peninsula had experience­d Japanese brutality at first hand for decades. These areas had come under direct Japanese colonial rule since the 1920s, which only ended after the Second World War.

South Korea, which is bound by a military treaty to the US and Japan, was particular­ly upset with the Abe government over the “comfort women” issue. The Japanese army had enslaved over 2,00,00 women, a large number of them from the Korean peninsula. They were forced to work in military brothels. The row with South Korea over the issue led to a major trade and diplomatic dispute that is yet to be fully resolved.

Conservati­ve Japanese politician­s like Abe insisted that the so-called “comfort women” took to their work voluntaril­y and that the Japanese army and government were not culpable. The Abe government also downplayed “the rape of Nanking” in 1937-38, in which a 3,00,000 Chinese people were killed by the occupying Japanese forces which went on a three-week rampage. Abe’s refusal to apologise for the massacre seriously damaged relations with China.

In February this year, Abe courted controvers­y by suggesting that Japan should consider hosting US nuclear weapons on its soil. He claimed that keeping US nukes on Japanese soil would deter possible threats from China and North Korea. The Japanese public remains overwhelmi­ngly opposed to nuclear weapons. They have not forgotten that Japan has been the only country that has been devastated by nuclear warfare.

In the February television interview, Abe also called on the Biden administra­tion to give up on its “one China” policy and said that Japan should aid Taiwan militarily if it came under attack from China.

Domestical­ly, Abe took a confrontat­ional stance towards sections of the media that dared to criticise his political agenda. There were allegation­s that he used his influence to get rid of television anchors who dared question his controvers­ial domestic and foreign policies. Like in India, right-wing trolls went after journalist­s who were critical of the government. The liberal newspaper Asahi Shimbun came under immense pressure for its critical coverage of the “comfort women” controvers­y. Investigat­ive journalism became a hazardous profession during Abe’s second stint as Prime Minister.

In the elections held for the upper house two days after Abe’s death, the LDP registered a huge win. Pollsters had predicted a big victory for the party much before the LDP leader’s demise. Kishida has said that it was his duty “to take over the ideas of former Prime Minister Abe”. With the supermajor­ity that the LDP and its allies have in parliament, they once again have the votes to amend the pacifist constituti­on. Kishida said that he hoped to have “the people’s understand­ing” and “deepen the discussion” on the issue.

Amending the Constituti­on continues to be unpopular with the Japanese public. Besides, there are more important issues for the government to tackle, such as rising inflation, unemployme­nt and the continuing threat posed by the pandemic. Kishida has also followed Abe in calling for increased defence spending and the production of offensive long-range missiles.

 ?? THE ASAHI SHIMBUN/REUTERS ?? FORMER PRIME MINISTER Shinzo Abe speaking at an election campaign event just before he was shot, at Nara in western Japan on July 8.
THE ASAHI SHIMBUN/REUTERS FORMER PRIME MINISTER Shinzo Abe speaking at an election campaign event just before he was shot, at Nara in western Japan on July 8.
 ?? ?? A PRIEST (right) leading Abe, the then Prime Minister, on his controvers­ial visit to the Yasukuni war shrine in Tokyo, in December 2013.
A PRIEST (right) leading Abe, the then Prime Minister, on his controvers­ial visit to the Yasukuni war shrine in Tokyo, in December 2013.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India