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House Adops Res Urging Japan to Acknowledge Responsibility in Asia

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  • House Adops Res Urging Japan to Acknowledge Responsibility in Asia

    On June 26, the House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee
    voted by an overwhelming margin to support a resolution urging Japan to
    "formally acknowledge, apologize, and accept historical responsibility
    in a clear and unequivocal manner for its mi

    Asahi Shimbun
    Published: Jul 04, 2007


    Though this document, which is likely to be approved by the House, is
    non-binding it has clearly displeased Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's
    administration while generating anxiety about the state of Japan-U.S.
    relations

    In many ways, it is understandable that Tokyo should feel unhappy.
    Since it recovered its independence in 1952, Japan has been a model
    citizen of the world. It has never even threatened a country with
    aggression while creating a free and prosperous society at home. Unlike
    Turkey, locked into denial of the Armenian genocide and Russia, whose
    KGB-trained ruler refuses to express regret for Soviet atrocities,
    Japan has publicly and frequently apologized for the evils of the Showa
    Era. Moreover, Japanese can point at the hypocrisy of American
    politicians, who mostly sat silently while their government legitimized
    torture in the wake of 9/11, berating the Japanese for the sins of
    their ancestors. Unfortunately, Japan's government may have shown
    contrition for the war crimes, but frequent statements, including by
    the prime minister, either making obtuse differences between broad and
    narrow coercion, or minimizing the extent of war crimes seriously
    undermined the credibility of its apologies. An advertisement entitled
    "The Facts" published on June 14 in The Washington Post and signed by
    lawmakers of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and the opposition
    Minshuto (Democratic Party of Japan), as well as by former diplomat
    Hisahiko Okazaki, one of Abe's best-known advisers, had a particularly
    negative impact.
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