The battle over World War II history flares up
during the ongoing NPT Review Conference.
As part of the ongoing
review conference for the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
(NPT), Japan’s Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida urged global leaders to see the
devastating consequences of atomic bombings. Kishida invited leaders to visit Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, the two Japanese cities targeted by U.S. atomic bombs at the end
of World War II, to “witness with their own eyes the realities of atomic
bombings.”
However, Kyodo News reports that the NPT
review committee removed similar language from its draft agreement after
objections from China’s representative, Fu Cong. Fu tied the emphasis on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki to Japan’s attempts to “distort history” by playing the
victim.
As Mina Pollmann noted
earlier for The Diplomat’s Tokyo Report blog, Japan, as the only
victim of atomic bombs, is playing a prominent role at the NPT review
conference. Japanese politicians, including the mayors of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, urged NPT member states to take concrete action toward the goal of
eliminating nuclear weapons. Victims of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings,
known as hibakusha in Japanese, attended the conference to add weight to
the discussion of the horrific consequences of nuclear weapons.
Kishida also touched on
this theme in his statement at the NPT review
conference. He argued that a “common recognition of humanitarian
consequences of nuclear weapons … serves as a driving force for nuclear
disarmament.” As a corollary, he invited “political leaders and youth” to
travel to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, particularly when leaders travel to Japan for
the G7 meetings next year.
Japan was pushing for that
language to be inserted into the final conference documents, but China (along
with South Korea) has objected in no uncertain terms. Fu told Kyodo News that
he had asked for the language to be removed from the draft document on Monday.
He said that “this conference should keep clear of the history” because there
is too much “historical baggage” tied to the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings.
Fu argued that by
emphasizing the suffering caused by the bombings, Japan’s government was
“trying to portray Japan as a victim of the Second World War, rather than a
victimizer.” He emphasized Japan’s own wartime atrocities in China, Korea, and
Southeast Asia, which he accused Tokyo of denying or downplaying. “We don’t
want any mention of Hiroshima [or] Nagasaki because there are reasons why those
two [cities] were bombed,” Fu said. Referencing the two cities in the NPT
document would be tantamount to “trying to impose a partial interpretation of
the Second World War on the conference,” Fu said.
Hua Chunying, a
spokesperson for China’s Foreign Ministry, responded similarly
when asked about the NPT review conference on Tuesday. She said that all
parties should “avoid introducing complicated and sensitive factors” into the
review conference negotiations. When pressed on whether Chinese leaders had any
plans to visit Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Hua retorted: “Let me ask first: when
will Japanese leaders come to China and visit the memorial hall of victims in
the Nanjing massacre?”
The
violence following the conquest of Nanjing by Japanese troops on December 13,
1937 is emblematic of
Japanese wartime atrocities — and Japanese historical revisionism — for many
Chinese. The Chinese government, which recently made December 13 a national
memorial day, says that 300,000 Chinese civilians were killed by Japanese
soldiers. Some Japanese officials, including a governor of state broadcaster
NHK, have denied that massacre ever happened. By Shannon
Tiezzi
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