Houston Chronicle

Obama, Abe heed politics of contrition

Japanese leader says he does not plan to visit Pearl Harbor

- By Nancy Benac

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe rejects the idea of visiting Pearl Harbor to reciprocat­e for President Barack Obama’s trip to Hiroshima.

SHIMA, Japan — Laying bare the complex politics of reconcilia­tion and contrition, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Wednesday rejected the idea of visiting Pearl Harbor to reciprocat­e President Barack Obama’s historic trip to Hiroshima later this week. Obama, for his part, said he would use his time in Hiroshima to honor all those killed in World War II and to push for a world without nuclear weapons.

The White House made clear well in advance of Obama’s arrival in Japan that the president would not apologize for the U.S. bombing on Aug. 6, 1945, that killed 140,000 people in Hiroshima and launched the nuclear age.

Abe, who met with Obama before the opening of a two-day summit of wealthy nations, was asked to reflect on the significan­ce of the president’s trip to Hiroshima and whether he would in turn visit Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, where a surprise attack by the Japanese military on Dec. 7, 1941, killed more than 2,400 people, wounded scores and led the United States into the war.

Abe spoke first of the suffering of the Japanese people: “Numerous citizens sacrificed their lives. And even now, there are those of us suffering because of the atomic bombing,” he said. Their desire, he added, is for the world “never to repeat” such a tragedy, and he expressed hope that Obama’s visit would lend momentum to the goal of a nuclearfre­e world.

As for a visit to Pearl Harbor, Abe said: “At this moment I don’t have any specific plan to visit Hawaii.” He did not foreclose the idea of a visit entirely, but he sidesteppe­d any suggestion that reciprocit­y was called for, as some have suggested.

The two leaders’ remarks made clear the sensitivit­ies still attached to both countries’ wartime actions, and previewed the strong emotions that will be attached to Obama’s trip to Hiroshima on Friday, when he will be the first sitting U.S. president to pay his respects.

Both Obama and Abe made a point to stress the strength of the current U.S.-Japanese alliance.

But Abe was unflinchin­g in his harsh criticism of the U.S. over a new irritant that has inflamed the Japanese public: the recent arrest of a former Marine in connection with the murder of a Japanese woman in Okinawa, where anti-U.S.-military sentiment is high because of a heavy American troop presence. The crime could fuel further opposition to the relocation of a U.S. Marine Corps air station on the southern Japanese island, a longdelaye­d project that Abe has been trying to push forward in the face of large protests.

Abe declared himself “just speechless” at the crime, and called for swift investigat­ion of the offender “who committed this self-centered and absolutely despicable crime.”

Obama, for his part, offered his condolence­s and “deepest regrets.” He said any violent crime by U.S. personnel or contractor­s was appalling and pledged to do “everything that we can to prevent any crimes from taking place of this sort.”

 ?? Na Son Nguyen / Associated Press ?? Vietnamese rapper Suboi, right, claps her hands and raps Wednesday for U.S. President Barack Obama at a town-hall style event for young leaders in Ho Chi Minh City. Obama is wrapping up a visit to Vietnam before traveling to Japan for the G-7 summit...
Na Son Nguyen / Associated Press Vietnamese rapper Suboi, right, claps her hands and raps Wednesday for U.S. President Barack Obama at a town-hall style event for young leaders in Ho Chi Minh City. Obama is wrapping up a visit to Vietnam before traveling to Japan for the G-7 summit...

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