The ghosts of Japan’s imperial past have returned to haunt the nation, its government, and the other countries in this region.

 
IF anyone still doubts the controversies about Japan’s current 
nationalistic urges, news reports and media commentaries in the region 
clearly confirm they persist.
Nations sometimes have leaders who shoot themselves in both feet and
 then promptly stuff them in their mouths. Japan’s current leaders have 
lately outdone all these others before.
Opinion leaders in the region have recently noted the excesses of 
right-wing Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government, its various 
indiscretions, and the reactions to them.
Much in the simmering controversies, notably in South Korea and 
China, comes courtesy of Abe’s team in Tokyo’s establishment. He, his 
deputy Taro Aso and some of their appointees have actively stoked the 
embers of regional contention.
Abe, the nationalist grandson of imprisoned Nobosuke Kishi, a 
suspected “Class A” war criminal, had briefly served as prime minister 
before without much controversy.
But by courting contempt this time in trying to rewrite history and 
defiantly visiting Yasukuni War Shrine honouring war criminals to 
proclaim that Japan did nothing wrong in World War II, Abe got the 
trouble he risked getting.
Aso himself is a “veteran” in provoking controversy. As foreign 
minister before, he was even more defiant and unapologetic than Abe, and
 has lately called on Japan to learn from Nazi Germany.
Their appointees such as chairman Katsuto Momii and governor Naoki 
Hyakuta of public broadcaster NHK have likewise made outrageous comments
 about Imperial Japan’s atrocities.
Momii said the sex slaves that Japanese troops made of Korean women 
was a common occurrence of any country at war, earning a rebuke from the
 United States.
Hyakuta championed Imperial Japan, denying that the Nanjing Massacre ever happened.
Abe’s choice of other controversies at the same time included 
efforts to rewrite the post-war Constitution to make it less 
conciliatory, revising past apologies for the war, and hardening Japan’s
 claims to disputed maritime territories.
The result: aggravating relations with South Korea and China. 
Although China-Japan relations are often said to be fraught because of 
Japan’s horrific wartime incursions, Tokyo’s relations with Seoul are 
even worse.
Even at the height of activism against US imperialism decades ago, Japan remained the biggest sore point for Koreans.
Now Abe is even less popular among South Koreans than North Korean 
leader Kim Jong-un, with two successive Presidents – and conservative 
ones at that – underscoring this position.
In a Korean press commentary on Thursday, Abe was described as 
having “become by far the most hated Japanese head of government for 
Koreans in recent decades”.
With 82% of Koreans convinced that Japan has not atoned for its sordid past, others have called Abe by worse names.
But have Abe and his inner circle learned anything from all this? 
They have offered retractions and apologies when pressed, but remained 
firmly set in their views.
Yet it need not be so. It was not like that for many years before.
In the 1990s, NHK invited me to give a seminar to regional news correspondents at its headquarters in Tokyo.
I was then holding a fellowship at a Japanese policy research 
institute to examine the prospects for regional cooperation, which 
happened to be a time of some regional ferment.
I introduced South-East Asia’s history and cultures without 
mentioning the atrocities committed by Imperial Japan, because there was
 no need to. Yet a young newsman later approached me to say he knew of 
Japanese war crimes despite all the denials.
A senior NHK staff who shared the taxi with me later explained that 
the common image of a constantly apologetic Japanese people was a 
misleading stereotype. Wherever these NHK people have gone today, they 
do not seem to be represented in its board.
Around that time, “maverick” Japanese historian Saburo Ienaga was 
entangled with the Japanese government in several court cases over an 
accurate depiction of Japan’s role during the war.
In Tokyo’s clumsy attempts to whitewash its wartime atrocities, the 
Education Ministry rejected Ienaga’s school textbooks. As he arrived at 
the courthouse to take on the authorities, he was cheered by a 
supportive Japanese public.
The Japanese public has repeatedly been more enlightened and liberal
 than any nationalistic government or self-proclaimed “liberal” party.
Commentators put this difference down to a flawed and dysfunctional political system, despite a mantle of democracy.
A recent commentary excused Japan in otherwise unfavourable 
comparisons with a contrite Germany because of “cultural” differences. 
However, while Germany assists in the international pursuit and 
prosecution of Nazi war criminals, Japan has the Yasukuni Shrine 
glorifying such criminals instead.
The commentary added that Germany was different in being offered full membership of a European community.
Actually, Japan was offered both membership and leadership of an 
East Asian Economic Grouping, when its economy was stronger and China’s 
ascendancy was still in its infancy, but Tokyo rejected it outright.
It was further said that like Germany, full atonement is best done 
in groups. But very much unlike Germany, there are groups in Japan that 
continue to deny wartime atrocities and – like Hyakuta and his ilk – 
insist that Imperial Japan had done Asia a favour with invasion and 
occupation.
Hardly anyone who has suffered Japanese wartime occupation would 
believe that tale. Japanese forces had never invaded North-East or 
South-East Asia only to grant independence to the countries there.
Among these reactionary and revisionist groups was a far-right party
 that had organised an international conference in Tokyo to argue these 
points some two decades ago.
As I entered the hall as an observer, I was swiftly introduced to a 
war veteran who had proudly published a book to “prove” that the Nanjing
 Massacre was a myth.
When former Malaysian foreign minister Tun Ghazali Shafie spotted me
 in the hall, he came over to assure me that everything was under 
control and that the Malaysian embassy had a staff present to take 
notes.
I looked around and saw a young Malaysian diplomat trying to make sense of the proceedings.
The organisers had invited foreign speakers like Ghazali to endorse 
their views, to which he hastened to reply that all he meant was that 
the region should look to the future together rather than dwell on the 
problems of the past. They did not seem to take note of the nuances.
Such extremist groups remain active in Japan, and have become even 
more vocal and visible than before. Observers note that they have lately
 moved from the margins to the mainstream of Japan’s body politic.
What is the sum total of their impact on Japanese officialdom? How far has their influence strayed beyond Tokyo?
Earlier this month, a Japanese diplomat based in Kuala Lumpur reviewed some of these issues with me in a private discussion.
He was a youngish, liberal-minded officer about the same age as the NHK news correspondent who confided in me in the 1990s.
In the course of our discussion I mentioned that although South 
Korea and China are often cited as griping about Japan’s militarist 
past, people in South-East Asia who had also suffered Japanese 
imperialism feel the same without necessarily announcing it to the 
world.
He expressed surprise, not knowing before that anyone in this region had suffered anything under Japan during the war.
Tokyo’s history deniers and revisionists seem to have scored some success after all.
Contributed by Behind The Headlines Bunn Nagara, The Star/ANN
- Bunn Nagara is a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Strategic and International Studies (ISIS) Malaysia.
- The views expressed are entirely the writer's own  
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