The
Japanese government has long had difficulties coming up with effective
apologies for the wartime misdeeds of the country’s military. For decades,
while many ordinary Japanese grassroots groups worked tirelessly to right the
wrongs of the past, the silence from the corridors of power in Tokyo was
deafening.
But then in
the 1990s all that changed, and the Japanese government issued a series of
statements on the events of the war. Like official apologies elsewhere, these
were not perfect. Turning words into deeds proved to be a challenge. But the
apologies enhanced Japan’s standing in the eyes of the world; above all, they
made a very big difference for many of the surviving victims.
Now the
world is confronted with the spectacle of a Japanese government caught up in a
contorted process of un-apologising.
The issue at
stake is the 1993 Kono Declaration, an apology issued by then chief
cabinet secretary Yohei Kono to the so-called ‘comfort women’, women who
suffered terrible sexual and other abuse in an empire-wide network of wartime
military brothels.
Sexual
violence in war is not a problem unique to Japan. But the ‘comfort station’
system was remarkable in its size — tens of thousands of women were recruited.
And there is abundant testimony from victims and others that many of the women
were recruited by force or trickery.
The 1993
Kono Declaration was a forthright apology for these events. Though it focused
particularly on South Korean women, it was also addressed to former ‘comfort women’
in other countries. It admitted that they were ‘recruited against their own
will, through coaxing, coercion, and so on’ and ‘lived in misery at comfort
stations under a coercive atmosphere’. It went on to promise that Japan would
‘forever engrave such issues in our memories through the study and teaching of
history’.
The Japanese
government refused to provide direct monetary compensation to former ‘comfort
women’. But it did offer welfare and medical support, while ‘atonement money’
was paid from a non-governmental fund. This response, sadly, created divisions
among the survivors: some welcomed the payments; others rejected them on the
grounds that the Japanese state should pay direct compensation itself.
During the
late 1990s, some Japanese history texts were extended to include a very brief
mention of the ‘comfort women’ issue. But this aroused the ire of Japanese
nationalists, who launched a fierce campaign for more ‘patriotic’ history
education. All mention of the issue has now disappeared from textbooks, and the
promise to engrave the issue in public memory has simply not been kept.
Meanwhile,
the ‘comfort women’ issue has become a political football in both Japan and South Korea,
being used by nationalists on both sides to enhance their popularity. In Japan
some prominent conservative politicians launched fierce attacks on the Kono
Declaration, which they regarded as an insult to the memory of Japan’s war
dead.
Japan’s
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has always been uncomfortable with the declaration’s
references to coercion. But Abe is also an eager supporter of Japan’s alliance with the US,
and the US government, concerned to maintain good relations between Japan and
South Korea, insists that Japan stand by the declaration.
This left
the government with a dilemma: how to undo the words of the Kono Declaration
without officially withdrawing the declaration. Here is the solution.
Step one:
create a committee to ‘re-examine’ the process by which the apology was put
together. Unsurprisingly, the government appointed committee found evidence
that the Japanese and South Korean governments negotiated about the wording of
the apology before it was released. This allows the apology to be presented not
as a truly Japanese document, but as a compromise worked out by a Japanese government
that lacked the will to stand up to pressure from South Korea.
Step two:
cast doubt on the veracity of victims. The Japanese committee’s
‘re-examination’ of the Kono Declaration does this by stressing that some of
the former ‘comfort women’ whose testimony was collected had ‘quite confused
memories’ and that the Japanese government did not fact-check their stories.
Step three:
define the word ‘force’ extremely narrowly, so that it applies only to
situations where women were marched out of their homes at gunpoint by members
of the Japanese military. This allows your committee to inform the world that,
according to the studies conducted by Japan, it is ‘not possible to confirm
that women were “forcefully recruited”’.
The result
is the Japanese government can truthfully insist that it has not withdrawn the
Kono Declaration, while very effectively demolishing its credibility.
Prime
Minister Abe has repeatedly stated that the ‘comfort women’ issue
should be left to the scholarly judgment of historians, but the government’s
committee contained just one historian, Ikuhiko Hata, who had been campaigning
for years to have the Kono Declaration rewritten.
Hata, who
has made an art form of combing through the testimony of former ‘comfort women’
for any inconsistency that may cast doubt on their truthfulness, publicly
predicts that the committee’s report is likely to make some Japanese people ‘so
enraged that their hair will stand on end’ and ‘conclude that Japan was duped
by South Korea’. ‘Maybe’, he adds, ‘a new public view will emerge that the Kono
Declaration should be withdrawn’.
The next
step, foreshadowed by the prime minister’s key political confidant, Koichi
Hagiuda, may be official tours around the region to present the ‘facts’
revealed by the new committee report.
How Prime
Minister Abe handles this issue in the future will be watched with great
interest — and at least some discomfort.
Tessa
Morris-Suzuki is an ARC Laureate Fellow based at the School of Culture, History
and Language, at the College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National
University.
No comments:
Post a Comment