Tokyo – Japan’s Abe To Refer To ‘apology’ In WW2 Anniversary Remarks

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    Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe attends a ceremony commemorating the 70th anniversary of  the 1945 atomic bombing of the city at Nagasaki's Peace Park in Nagasaki, western Japan, August 9, 2015. ReutersTokyo – Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will include the words “apology” and “aggression” in his statement marking the 70th anniversary of World War Two’s end, NHK public TV said, an apparent nod to critics who fear he will dilute past apologies.

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    An initial draft did not include the word “apology”, some media reports had said, which would likely anger China and South Korea where bitter memories of Japan’s sometimes brutal past occupation and colonialization run deep.

    Abe is juggling conflicting priorities in crafting the statement, expected to be approved by his cabinet one day before the Aug. 15 anniversary. He needs to satisfy the desire of its close ally, the United States, to ease tensions in East Asia.

    He also wants to keep an incipient thaw in ties with rival China on track as he eyes a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping that one close aide said was likely in September.

    However, the conservative Abe’s core supporters want to end what they see as a humiliating cycle of apologies they say distract from Japan’s seven decades of post-war peace.

    Abe has said he will uphold past statements about the war, including then-premier Tomiichi Murayama’s 1995 landmark “heartfelt apology” for Japan’s aggression and colonialism. But his previous remarks and stated desire to look to the future have raised concerns he wants to water down those apologies.

    NHK said a draft of Abe’s statement would refer specifically to the Murayama Statement’s key phrases “apology”, “deep remorse”, “aggression” and “colonial rule”, but the broadcaster did not elaborate on the phrasing.

    “While it appears that Abe is considering the inclusion of such key words … in an attempt to pre-empt criticism both at home and from overseas, it seems possible, perhaps even probable, that he will significantly alter the context in which these words are used from the Murayama statement,” said Sophia University political science professor Koichi Nakano.

    “He might thus try to satisfy both his revisionist base and critics, but he might also simply anger both.”

    Doubts persist over how Abe will refer to Japan’s wartime military aggression, a term he has questioned in the past.

    In a report last week, his advisers referred to Japan’s “aggression” in China after 1931, although two dissenters objected to the term, citing a lack of definition in international law and a reluctance to single out Japan when other nations had engaged in similar acts.


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    3 Comments
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    sighber
    sighber
    8 years ago

    Honest Abe?

    8 years ago

    The so-called apology is seventy years too late; Japan has never paid a penny in compensation to the thousands of American GI’s who were held as POW’s, and forced to work as slave laborers. They beat them, tortured them, starved them, denied them medical care, and treated them as sub-humans. It is too bad that there wasn’t the equivalent of a Simon Wiesenthal in Japan, as there was in Europe; if so, more Japanese war criminals would have been apprehended, and prosecuted. Whereas Japan loves to portray itself as the “victim”, it conveniently glosses over its role in the killings of hundreds of thousands of civilians, in China, the Philippines, Malaya, Singapore, and Manchuria.