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  • Shinzo Abe Is Not Alone

    Shinzo Abe Is Not Alone

    EDITORIAL | FEBRUARY 6, 2014 3:03 PM
    ________________________________

    By Edmond Y. Azadian

    Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was elected last year with a
    strong mandate, has assumed the responsibility of reforming his
    country's sagging economy and in the process he has determined to
    harken back to its imperialist history much to the chagrin of Japan's
    World War II victims, namely China and Korea.

    This aggressive posture, with its militaristic overtones, worries
    Washington's policy planners, eager to maintain stability in the
    region and to contain North Korea's unpredictable behavior.

    Abe's revisionist policy has relevance and also a bearing on other
    historic relations, especially German-Jewish and Turkish-Armenian
    relations. Should the world remain silent, other revisionist
    politicians may emulate Abe by victimizing once more history's
    victims.

    President Eisenhower, before leaving office, had warned the US public
    against the domination of the military-industrial complex. It is well
    known that military buildup is a lucrative business that generates
    wealth for a certain segment of society. Therefore, the Japanese prime
    minister is taking up the recovery of his country's economy where
    Eisenhower had left off. In order to achieve this goal, he has to
    create the right atmosphere and excuses to embark upon his
    militaristic path. Tensions are already flaring between Tokyo and
    Beijing over some islands in the East China Sea, claimed by both
    parties.

    To exacerbate the situation, Mr. Abe has taken some calculated and
    provocative steps. First, he has plans to revise Japan's constitution
    drafted under US occupation after Japan's unconditional surrender at
    the end of World War II. General McArthur saw to it that Japan can
    never rearm itself to wage a war of aggression. That is why Article 9
    of its constitution renounces warfare and the threat or use of force
    and that unlike other countries, it has a pacifist aim written into
    the constitution. The prime minister is planning to "reinterpret" that
    article to pave the way for Japan's militarization, although the US
    has 16 military bases in that country and has extended its nuclear
    umbrella over it.

    Since militarization needs an excuse, Abe has undertaken the most
    audacious initiative to provoke China and South Korea, by visiting the
    Yasukuni Shrine, adjacent to the revisionist war museum.

    Japan's barbaric actions during WWII in China and Korea are well
    documented, especially its enslavement of Korean women as "comfort
    women" in its military brothels and brutal assaults in China, the most
    famous case known as the Rape of Nanking, where systematic rape and
    murder was the order of the day in that Chinese city by the Japanese
    Imperial Army.

    Abe's predecessors have made halfhearted apologies for these crimes,
    which have satisfied neither China nor South Korea.

    After the war, the Tokyo Tribunal, similar to the Nuremberg Trials,
    took place between May 1946 and November 1948 and condemned 28
    political and military leaders as Class A war criminals. Of those, 14
    were executed and buried at Yasukuni Shrine, where Mr. Abe visited to
    honor them. He defiantly justified his actions, maintaining that "the
    14 Class A war criminals honored at Yasukuni Shrine are not war
    criminals under Japanese law, but the country had to accept the
    outcome of the Tokyo Tribunal to become an independent nation."

    The Chinese and South Korean governments are outraged and they have
    expressed their indignation in no uncertain terms. The US government
    has been trying to warn Mr. Abe against a repeat performance. Western
    media also pointed to it as a self-inflicted act as the Economist of
    London wrote, "Morally, it is as if Angela Merkel were to pay her
    respects at a monument that, among other things, honors the Third
    Reich. Politically, it is self-defeating....China and South Korea, that
    suffered under Japanese imperialism, are understandably horrified.
    Step-by-step, they fear, Japan is shedding the restraints that bound
    it after the war without having ever faced up to its crimes."

    Mr. Abe can defy his country's old victims and challenge world public
    opinion safely sheltered under the umbrella of the world's most
    powerful nation: the US.

    Another nation -- under the farcical title of trusted ally -- is Turkey,
    which continues its denialist policy, unrepentant. Talaat Pasha, the
    Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire and the architect of the Armenian
    Genocide, confided to the Turkish feminist Halide Edip: "I have the
    conviction that as long as a nation does its best for its own
    interests, and succeeds, the world admires it and thinks it moral. I
    am ready to die for what I have done and I know I shall die for it."

    What he had done was boastfully described in Ambassador Morgenthau's
    Story. Talaat is quoted as saying, "I have done more toward solving
    the Armenian problem in three months than Abdul Hamid II accomplished
    in 30 years."

    The precursor of Nuremberg Trials, the Istanbul Trials of 1919, under
    Ottoman Sultan Mahmoud VI, accused 130 suspects of committing war
    crimes and the "massacre and destruction of Armenians." On July 5,
    19191, the court released its verdict: Talaat, Enver, Jemal and Dr.
    Nazim were condemned to death in abstentia. The criminals had fled the
    country and the administration of justice was left to a group of young
    avengers.

    Talaat had found refuge in Germany and he was planning to return to
    Ankara, where, according to his confession to a British intelligence
    officer, Aubrey Herbert, "the Turkish national movement was forming."
    The reference is to Mustafa Kemal's Milli movement, which eventually
    built the present-day Turkish Republic out of the ruins of the Ottoman
    Empire.

    Talaat's life was cut short when he was assassinated by Soghomon
    Tehlirian in Berlin in 1921. He had pinned his hopes on Kemal's
    nationalist movement, which turned out to be the extension of the
    criminal Ittihadist policy. Many rank-and-file members of that
    government who had Armenian blood on their hands joined the Kemalist
    government, as it has been fully documented by Turkish historian Taner
    Akçam.

    The Republic of Turkey was cooperating with Hitler during World War II
    by providing raw materials to the German war machine. That is how it
    was able to repatriate Talaat's remains from Berlin to Istanbul in
    1943. The remains were reburied in the Sisli district of Istanbul. A
    monument was also erected in his memory on Hurriet Tepe (Freedom Hill)
    for the Turkish people to honor that war criminal. It is believed that
    as of 2012, Mehmet Talaat Pasha has had many prominent streets named
    after him in the modern state of Turkey.

    Far from apologizing for the crime of genocide, Turkish leaders have
    continued to threaten Armenia and the Armenians. Still fresh in our
    memories is the threat by then Turkish President Turgut Ozal, at the
    outset of Armenia's independence, who asked rhetorically whether 1915
    had not taught a lesson to Armenians and if they are itching for
    Turkey to drop a few bombs over Yerevan.

    As we can see, Shinzo Abe is not alone. He has also cohorts in Turkey.

    Yet many politicians play politics with our own Genocide monument and
    the measure of their friendship with Armenia is revealed by their
    treatment of Tsitsernakabert in Yerevan. Pope John Paul II politicized
    his trip to Armenia by avoiding the use of the "g" word. Hillary
    Clinton made a mockery of her official trip to Armenia, when she
    announced that her visit to the Genocide museum was a private one and
    that she had left her political mantle of secretary of state at the US
    embassy, where she was staying. In her calculation, she signaled to
    Turkey that the US government's representative was not honoring the
    Armenian martyrs. On the other hand, Armenians felt very honored that
    she was at the monument, whether in a private or official capacity.

    Even the heads of our friendly countries, fearful of antagonizing
    Turkey, have shunned the monument. Iran's President Ahmadinejad cut
    short his visit to Armenia to skip his planned visit to the monument,
    under the pretext of tending to an urgent matter in his country.
    President Bashar Al-Assad, with the same precautions, did not include
    a visit to the monument when he came to Armenia.

    The majority of the Armenians in the Middle East sympathize with the
    Palestinian cause and they are thrilled when the head of the
    Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas visits the manger in Bethlehem on
    Armenian Christmas. But when he visited Baku the last time, he
    shamelessly announced that as Palestinians, whose land is occupied,
    "we understand Azerbaijan's predicament" as some of its territory
    "remains under occupation."

    Major and minor powers play politics with symbols. If we expect
    support from the world to expose our case and to oblige them to
    respect our martyrs, we need to deplore the abominable sacrilege of
    politicians like Shinzo Abe who want to rewrite history and to absolve
    the sins of history's murderers.

    - See more at: http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2014/02/06/shinzo-abe-is-not-alone/#sthash.ggdnJWa7.dpuf

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