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Top JASDF General sacked for pro-WW2 era Japanese Imperialist stance in essay

CougarKing

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I certainly hope that the growing number of actions like his doesn't mean the return to this type of Japanese militarism.

http://www.thestar.com/News/World/article/542864

Bill Schiller
Asia Bureau

TOKYO–Essay contests aren't normally the stuff of controversy.

But if the contest is held in Japan and the subject is the nation's role in World War II – it can stir the embers of emotion, trigger a national discussion and even take down titans in the country's military establishment.

This month, Gen. Toshio Tamogami was sacked from his position as air force chief after he took top prize in a contest in which he suggested Japan should cast off the widely held views of its World War II culpability – and "regain its glorious history."

The general asserted Japan was not an aggressor, Pearl Harbor was an American trap and Japan's brutal occupation of other Asian countries – which by some accounts claimed 20 million lives – wasn't really all that bad.

In fact, he wrote, "many" Asian nations reflect positively on it.

China was stunned by the statement – it had borne much of the brunt of that brutality. What began as a contest – organized, as it turns out, by a nationalistic businessman and ideologue – erupted in fury.

Tamogami was sent packing, an investigation into military officers' training was launched and the dark and persistent forces of Japan's World War II revisionism were once again thrust into the spotlight.


But Tamogami's essay did something else: for Japanese peace activists, it was an ironic "call to arms."

So one recent weekday afternoon, the Housewives' Association of the Construction Workers' Union of Tokyo visited Yushukan – the nation's most hallowed museum of militarism and a memorial to the nation's war dead. The women had never been before.

But after Tamogami's disturbing essay, they felt they had to.

"We need to study what makes these people want to glorify war," said Fumie Fujimoto, who heads the 26,000-member association well-known for its peace activism.

"If we want to pass on our message of peace to the next generation, we have to understand how they think in-depth. That's why we came here today."

Inside the museum, in film and state-of-the-art displays, are many solemn and uncontroversial commemorations in keeping with the museum's function of honouring those who died.

But there are also many of the very same ideas put forward by Tamogami in his controversial paper. And they're viewed by thousands here every day.

One film, We Won't Forget, presents a version of the war that few in the West would recognize. It emphasizes, as many of the displays do, that the Japanese tried every means to avoid war and ended up fighting only reluctantly and defensively, solely for their own survival.

As for the highly politicized Tokyo Trials, a narrator in the film explains, against a background of tasteful orchestral music, that charges against Japanese combatants were "groundless," the trials were based on "distorted history" and the only true hero was dissenting Indian judge Radhabinod Pal.

On the other hand, in wall displays, Japan's massacre of Chinese civilians in Nanjing in 1937 is vaguely touched upon but not explicitly dealt with in detail. One display refers to "confused battles."

Historians say those "confused battles" were actually a rampage that left between 100,000 and 300,000 Chinese civilians dead.

Outside the museum, Takeshi Kimura, a professor of history at the University of Tsukuba, is philosophical, but not unfeeling.

"This really isn't a history museum," he said. "It's a museum next to a shrine."

The shrine he refers to is the Yasukuni Shrine, the memorial to Japan's 2.5 million war dead of which Yushukan museum is a small part.

Yasukuni has been a lightning rod for controversy in recent years, stemming from the fact that among the dead commemorated here are 14 Class A war criminals.

As a consequence, visits to the shrine by Japanese politicians always anger Asian leaders whose people suffered at the hands of the criminals. China and South Korea have been most critical.

"This shouldn't be regarded as a historical representation," Kimura cautions. "It's more like a point of view."

He is, however, sharply critical of Tamogami. "It's just totally wrong,' he said. "Unless you admit that we made some mistakes, there is really no way to learn anything."

The union women have another bone to pick with the general and the way in which he was dismissed by Prime Minister Taro Aso.

They're not happy that Tamogami is able to walk away with his $725,000 pension. "It's not a proper dismissal if he's still going to receive his 60 million yen," said 61-year-old Mari Sagara. "This is taxpayers' money. I can't tolerate it. They should have just let him go."

The general's essay not only caused an international embarrassment, but brazenly contradicted official government policy.

In both 1995 and 2005, Japan formally announced its remorse for its wartime conduct and apologized.

But speaking before Parliament earlier this month, Tamogami was unbowed.

He said he did not "see anything wrong in what I wrote."

"I was fired after saying Japan is a good country," he told Parliament. "It seems a bit strange."
 
CougarDaddy said:
I certainly hope that the growing number of actions like his doesn't mean the return to this type of Japanese militarism.

http://www.thestar.com/News/World/article/542864

This person is not the first to try and rewrite the official history of a country.  It happens worldwide...

 
Well too bad he didnt just leave revisionism out of his essay entirely. But I share his concern over the lack of the warrior ethos in Japan and Germany for that matter. Both are former enemies that are so tied to their WW2 embarrasment that they are unable to fight a just war over 60 years later.
 
I am not surprised by this report. It has indeed been raising it's head [right wing neo-fascist elements] in both Germany and Japan for many years now.  I have read that there are numerous veterans of the Imperial Japanese Forces who are to this day unrepentant.  Why should this be shocking in some quarters, I don't know.

I have on the other hand a friend who is also the son of a WW2 vet, albeit a German one.  He chose for his national service to drive an ambulance vs military service.  60 plus years down the road from the end of the war, and he still feels guilt for actions taken before his birth. 

What did shock me however was the size of buddys pension.  Now I have a severe case of pension envy.
 
Fired for defending Japan's war record, air force chief is a folk hero to some
By MARI YAMAGUCHI  Associated Press Writer
January 11, 2009
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-as-japan-justifying-wwii,0,7677459.story

TOKYO (AP) —
Toshio Tamogami draws a full pension, gives lectures, appears on TV talk shows and is treated with respect.

Not bad for a general who two months ago was fired for writing an essay justifying Japan's entry into World War II.

The case of the ousted air force chief reveals how the idea that Japan's war was justified still lives on in the minds of many Japanese, including powerful ones.

When Japan went to war, the nation was told it was for self-defense, to free Asia from Western colonial powers, and to deter the United States from attacking Japan.

Japan officially abandoned that view of history after its crushing defeat in 1945, but every so often a Japanese high-up would roil the waters by justifying Japanese conduct in the war and treatment of its neighbors. Not until 1995 did a Japanese prime minister acknowledge his country was an aggressor that had brought about great suffering in Asia.

The air force chief's essay shows that Japan's argument with history isn't over.

It was entered in a contest sponsored by a commercial company and conducted by Toshio Motoya, a right-leaning businessman. Motoya said 235 essays were submitted, one-third by air force officers, and most shared Tamogami's views.

"We should review our perspective of history and become a truly independent nation, or our future is at risk," Motoya said. "I'm confident Mr. Tamogami will get credit some day for sacrificing his job by what he wrote."

Tamogami called his essay "Was Japan an Aggressor Nation?" and wrote that Japan has been unjustly subjected to "the history of the victor."

He also said his country deserves praise for building universities in Taiwan and Korea when they were Japanese colonies before the war.

The affair made headlines and stirred debate in parliament.

While Prime Minister Taro Aso has been circumspect, saying only that Tamogami's public expression of such views was out of step with government statements, former Trade Minister Takeo Hiranuma praised Tamogami for his frankness.

"What Mr. Tamogami said was true," he said in a video message on his Web site. "We should take this opportunity to study harder so we can have correct views of Japan's history."

But some 140 members of the History Educators Conference of Japan issued a protest.

"There are many people, including political leaders, who support Tamogami's views," said historian Hisao Ishiyama. "It's not a problem of one fanatic military official."

Tamogami's views are common among nationalists, including former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who, with a strong segment of the ruling party behind him, spearheaded a partially successful campaign over several years to remove mention of Japan's wartime atrocities from textbooks.

Only in recent years, after lawsuits from victims, has Japan acknowledged many of its brutalities, including the use of poison gas in China and sex slaves recruited in countries under wartime occupation.

Aso himself has had to admit to parliament for the first time that his family-run company used hundreds of Allied war prisoners at its mines in the final months of the war. He offered no apology.

The government must make its views clear, or else the public might suspect Aso and other ministers agree with the general's views, Kaori Hayashi, a Tokyo University academic, wrote in The Asahi newspaper.

Japan's ambivalence has diplomatic consequences. Its expressions of remorse are often undercut by statements such as one by a group of nationalist lawmakers from the ruling Liberal Democratic Party who claimed the death toll in the "Rape of Nanking" massacre, one of the worst incidents in Japan's invasion of China, was grossly inflated.

Teikyo University professor Toshiyuki Shikata, a former army general, said Tamogami was probably motivated by a desire to instill national pride in the troops.

Japan renounced its right to wage war in its 1947 U.S.-drafted constitution. Over the years, however, it has slowly expanded its military capability by passing special legislation and altering interpretations of the war-renouncing clause.

Japan deployed about 600 army troops to southern Iraq in 2004-2006 on a humanitarian mission and provided airlifts in Iraq until last year. Aso's government is now considering sending warships to international anti-piracy patrols off Somalia.

 
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