Shinzo Abe was elected the new president of Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic
Party on September 20 and is therefore to become Japan's new prime minister.
People are concerned about how the incoming prime minister would address
diplomatic relations, especially China-Japan ties, which are caught in the worst
impasse since the rapprochement in 1972.
As a protege, hand-picked and groomed by Junichro Koizumi, Abe is very likely
to inherit Koizumi's neo-conservatism attitude. The eccentric personal style of
the outgoing prime minister is, however, hard to imitate.
At the same time, the Japanese are expecting a politician whose behaviour is
dictated by reason rather than whimsical impulses. The Japanese public want a
leader who demonstrates much more flexibility in handling diplomatic matters,
never abandoning the nurturing of good relations with their Asian neighbours
while consolidating the nation's relations with the United States.
Judging from Abe's performance as a politician and from his election pledges,
it is predicted that the new prime minister would adopt a more flexible policy,
which is more balanced than his maverick predecessor's, towards China and the
Republic of Korea (ROK).
Abe could steer clear of sensitive issues such as paying homage to the
Yasukuni Shrine which honours war criminals among Japan's war dead. But on the
other hand, Abe could be more hawkish in defending the "national interests" as
he envisions them and would focus more on strategic manoeuvres to achieve his
ends, in contrast with Koizumi's emphasis on "personal conviction" and
reason-proof obstinacy.
Abe pledged in his election platform to mend the damaged relations with
Japan's neighbours, China and ROK in particular, but also claimed that such
relation-mending efforts were two-way affairs, saying that Japan's door is wide
open for China and ROK.
He thus threw the ball into the court of China and ROK, as though the latter
should take the initiative to walk into the gate of Japan, instead of the other
way around.
The current unhealthy status of China-Japan relations should be blamed on
Koizumi's headstrong handling of the bilateral ties.
Shinzo Abe must understand that China's door is wide open for him.
Top politicians should cushion the negative impact of narrow nationalist
feelings on diplomacy as much as possible.
This is especially important for Japanese politicians when handling relations
with Northeast Asian countries, which fell victim to Japanese aggression in the
19th and 20th centuries and, moreover, submitted to Japanese colonial rule.
In this context, the narrow-minded nationalism on the part of Japan could
pose a major threat to the regional stability.
Abe trumpets that Japan should join the ranks of the countries, which set the
rules of the game and pushes for diplomacy based on Japan's own ideas and
initiative. If he, however, simply copies Koizumi's extra pro-US policy, his
idea of diplomacy based on Japan's own initiative would come to no avail.
As carefully selected successor to Koizumi, Abe puts forward the idea of
US-Japanese alliance for the good of the world and Asia, indicating that he will
follow his mentor's pro-US line.
In the tenure of Koizumi as Japanese prime minister, Japan adopted the
diplomatic approach of getting closer to the United States and estranging from
China.
This was meant to maintain certain degrees of tension in its relations with
China and, in turn, make Japanese citizens feel "the pressure from China," -
diverting pressure away from Koizumi's diplomacy of leaning exclusively towards
the United States.
Now that a new prime minister is taking the helm, people have reason to hope
that Abe will not tread on the same old rut.
Ichiro Ozawa, head of the Democratic Party of Japan, puts forward the idea
that Japan should have an alliance with the United States based on equality.
Furthermore, Ozawa urges the formation of an "equilateral triangle" between
Japan, China and the United States. The idea is rather diametrically opposed to
Koizumi's excessively pro-US policy.
Abe now faces a political landscape that is different from that in Koizumi's
tenure. A rising and ambitious Democratic Party is bent on taking over the prime
minister's office in 2007. Restrained by such factors, Abe, therefore, are
unlikely to always have his own way as his wilful predecessor did.
Over the issue of revising the constitution, Abe has always resented the
ninth article in Japan's post-war pacifist constitution, which states that Japan
abandons wars.
Abe regards this article of contradicting the rights of an independent
nation. He also resents that Japan is deprived of the right of belligerence. So
the ninth article in the constitution is a sore point in the eyes of Abe, and
must be removed. He vows to formulate a new Japanese constitution that fits the
21st century, urging that the current constitution be re-interpreted. He wants
to formulate the new constitution in five years.
Sixty years have passed since Japan's post-war constitution was enacted and
great changes have thereby taken place both inside Japan and on the
international political and economic terrain.
It is, therefore, reasonable that Japan revises its constitution and the
revision should not be equated to raising the spectre of militarism.
The international community should be alerted to the attempts of the Japanese
right-wingers to overthrow the ninth article, which is regarded the core of its
pacifist constitution. These extremists want to lead Japan away from the road of
peaceful development, along which the country has been travelling ever since and
end of World War II.
They are doing all this by exploiting Japanese citizens' justifiable demand
for revising the constitution.
Taku Yamazaki, former vice-president of the Liberal Democratic Party of
Japan, worries that Abe, a member of the post-war generation, is simply unable
to understand the horror of war and how valuable peace is. Abe can be easily
deviated from the track of settling disputes via dialogue or by diplomatic means
and is prone to emphasize strength, in the opinion of Yamazaki.
Abe is likely to boost military expenditure in an around-about way in his
term as prime minister, taking into account of his outlooks of history and war,
according to Yamazaki.
On the matter of the Yasukuni Shrine, Abe has ever backed Koizumi in his
visits to the war shrine and he himself visited Yasukuni in April this year,
though shunning publicity. He has so far remained ambiguous about whether or not
he would visit the war shrine in the capacity of prime minister. But he cannot
remain evasive forever, now that he is prime minister. He must show where he
stands definitely and unambiguously.
Koizumi's repeated Yasukuni visits have served to erect a towering barrier to
the improvement of the China-Japan relations. Abe's position on this matter will
be a touchstone to test his sincerity in bettering ties with China and ROK.
The author is a researcher with the Institute of Japanese Studies under the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
(China Daily 09/25/2006 page4)