Remarks made by aides to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe about US-Japan ties and the countries’ wartime past are giving the Japanese leader a political headache as he seeks to soothe strains with key ally Washington amid rising regional tensions.
Investors have begun to worry that Abe, who took office in December 2012 pledging to revive the economy, is shifting more attention to his conservative agenda to bolster Japan’s military and recast history with a less apologetic tone.
Japan-US ties hit a bump when Abe visited Tokyo’s Yasukuni Shrine on Dec. 26, further straining Japan’s relations with China and South Korea, which see the shrine as a symbol of Tokyo’s past militarism because it honors war criminals among the country’s war dead.
‘DISAPPOINTMENT’
The visit prompted a rare statement of “disappointment” from the US. Diplomats hope that an April trip by US President Barack Obama will help ease bilateral strains and affirm the countries’ alliance, which is the linchpin of Tokyo’s security policy.
Taking questions in parliament yesterday, Abe said that Japan had caused great pain in Asia and elsewhere in the past. His government would stick by past apologies and the door was open for dialogue with Beijing and Seoul, he added.
“As I’ve said before, in the past many nations, especially those in Asia, suffered great damage and pain due to our nation,” he said. “Our government recognizes this, as have the governments that have gone before, and will continue this stance.”
“In the post-war era, we have deeply reflected on this and have built a free and democratic nation based on fundamental human rights. There will be no change in this path,” he said.
Many of Abe’s aides share a conservative agenda that includes forging a security stance less reliant on Washington and rejecting what they view as a “masochistic,” overly apologetic interpretation of Japan’s wartime deeds.
Those views are well-known, but comments airing them publicly are gaining more attention than they did during Abe’s first year in office, when his priority was efforts to revive the world’s third-biggest economy with his “Abenomics” mix of easy monetary policy and spending to boost growth.
POWERFUL MILITARY
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga was forced for the second straight day to field questions about remarks from an Abe aide, this time by Abe’s economic adviser Etsuro Honda.
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Honda defended the Yasukuni visit and said that Japan needed a strong economy so it could build a more powerful military and stand up to China.
The paper also reported that Honda wanted what it called “a nation that isn’t beholden to the US as a patron, and doesn’t feel restrained by the sensitivities of its neighbors.”
Suga said Honda’s remarks had been distorted.
“What I meant was not conveyed at all. I never said Abenomics had a military objective,” Suga quoted Honda as telling him.
On Wednesday, Suga instructed special adviser to Abe Seiichi Eto to remove a video message on YouTube in which he said he was “disappointed” by the US’ statement on the prime minister’s Yasukuni visit. The remarks echoed those made in an interview with Reuters published earlier this month.
Suga told a news conference he had taken the step because Eto’s video remarks — which he was filmed making in front of large posters showing Abe alongside his slogan: “Take Back Japan” — were personal opinions not in line with the government’s position.
Also yesterday, NHK chairman Katsuto Momii was grilled by lawmakers again over remarks he made that appeared to justify Japan’s wartime military brothels by saying that all warring nations had similar systems.
The head of Japan’s influential public broadcaster later retracted the comments, but this week, he was quoted by media as telling an NHK board of governors’ meeting: “What’s wrong with what I said?”
Momii yesterday declined to comment on those reports.
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