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Japanese minister visits controversial shrine to mark end of World War II

Japanese minister visits controversial shrine to mark end of World War II

Al Jazeera3 days ago
A Japanese cabinet minister was among thousands of people to visit a controversial war memorial in Tokyo as Japan marks 80 years since the end of World War II.
Agricultural Minister Shinjiro Koizumi on Friday paid his respects at the Yasukuni Shrine, a symbol of Japan's militaristic past.
He was joined by dozens of national and local politicians from the far-right 'Japan First' Sanseito Party, according to local media.
The Shinto shrine was built in the 19th century to honour Japan's war dead, but it is best known for enshrining 14 Japanese 'class A' war criminals and 1,000 others also found guilty by an Allied tribunal after World War II.
The Yasukuni Shrine is considered a political lightning rod in East Asia, where memories of Japan's wartime atrocities are not forgotten, but senior Japanese leaders have continued to visit over the years.
But the shrine was just one site where Japanese people gathered on Friday to mark 80 years since Emperor Hirohito announced Japan's surrender in an August 15, 1945, radio broadcast.
Tokyo formally surrendered a few weeks later on September 2, 1945.
Japanese media reported that more than 4,000 people attended the National Memorial Ceremony for the War Dead in Tokyo, including Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba.
Ishiba spoke at the commemoration about the lessons Japan carried from the war.
'We should never repeat the devastation of war. We will never, ever make a mistake in choosing the path to take,' Ishiba said, according to Kyodo News.
Ishiba also spoke of Japan's 'remorse' over the war, marking the first time a Japanese prime minister used the term in more than a decade at a war memorial, the news outlet said.
Japan famously adopted a pacifist constitution after World War II, but wounds linger from decades of Japanese colonial rule in parts of Asia that lasted from 1895 to 1945.
The prime minister stopped short of directly mentioning Japan's wartime aggression and the suffering it caused, a precedent set by past Japanese leaders, Kyodo said.
Japan's Emperor Naruhito also attended the event, where he said he was 'overcome with deep emotion' at Japan's transformation since the end of World War II.
'It is my sincere hope that we carry on passing down the stories of the hardships endured during and after the war and continue in unity of spirit to seek peace and the happiness of the people in the future,' he said, according to Japanese media.
Japan last week also marked 80 years since the US dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing more than 200,000 people.
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Japanese minister visits controversial shrine to mark end of World War II
Japanese minister visits controversial shrine to mark end of World War II

Al Jazeera

time3 days ago

  • Al Jazeera

Japanese minister visits controversial shrine to mark end of World War II

A Japanese cabinet minister was among thousands of people to visit a controversial war memorial in Tokyo as Japan marks 80 years since the end of World War II. Agricultural Minister Shinjiro Koizumi on Friday paid his respects at the Yasukuni Shrine, a symbol of Japan's militaristic past. He was joined by dozens of national and local politicians from the far-right 'Japan First' Sanseito Party, according to local media. The Shinto shrine was built in the 19th century to honour Japan's war dead, but it is best known for enshrining 14 Japanese 'class A' war criminals and 1,000 others also found guilty by an Allied tribunal after World War II. The Yasukuni Shrine is considered a political lightning rod in East Asia, where memories of Japan's wartime atrocities are not forgotten, but senior Japanese leaders have continued to visit over the years. But the shrine was just one site where Japanese people gathered on Friday to mark 80 years since Emperor Hirohito announced Japan's surrender in an August 15, 1945, radio broadcast. Tokyo formally surrendered a few weeks later on September 2, 1945. Japanese media reported that more than 4,000 people attended the National Memorial Ceremony for the War Dead in Tokyo, including Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba. Ishiba spoke at the commemoration about the lessons Japan carried from the war. 'We should never repeat the devastation of war. We will never, ever make a mistake in choosing the path to take,' Ishiba said, according to Kyodo News. Ishiba also spoke of Japan's 'remorse' over the war, marking the first time a Japanese prime minister used the term in more than a decade at a war memorial, the news outlet said. Japan famously adopted a pacifist constitution after World War II, but wounds linger from decades of Japanese colonial rule in parts of Asia that lasted from 1895 to 1945. The prime minister stopped short of directly mentioning Japan's wartime aggression and the suffering it caused, a precedent set by past Japanese leaders, Kyodo said. Japan's Emperor Naruhito also attended the event, where he said he was 'overcome with deep emotion' at Japan's transformation since the end of World War II. 'It is my sincere hope that we carry on passing down the stories of the hardships endured during and after the war and continue in unity of spirit to seek peace and the happiness of the people in the future,' he said, according to Japanese media. Japan last week also marked 80 years since the US dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing more than 200,000 people.

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Bird pointed out that, even in the immediate aftermath of the bombing, some key politicians and public figures denounced it as a war crime. Early critics included physicist Albert Einstein and former President Herbert Hoover, who was quick to speak out against the civilian bloodshed. 'The use of the atomic bomb, with its indiscriminate killing of women and children, revolts my soul,' Hoover wrote within days of the bombing. Over time, historians have increasingly cast doubt on the most common justification for the atomic attacks: that they played a decisive role in ending World War II. Some academics point out that other factors likely played a larger role in the Japanese decision to surrender, including the Soviet Union's declaration of war against the island nation on August 8. Others have speculated whether the bombings were meant mostly as a demonstration of strength as the US prepared for its confrontation with the Soviet Union in what would become the Cold War. Accounts from Japanese survivors and media reports also played a role in changing public perceptions. John Hersey's 1946 profile of six victims, for instance, took up an entire edition of The New Yorker magazine. It chronicled, in harrowing detail, everything from the crushing power of the blast to the fever, nausea and death brought on by radiation sickness. By 1990, a Pew poll found that a shrinking majority in the US approved of the atomic bomb's use on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Only 53 percent felt it was merited. Rationalising US use of force But even at the close of the 20th century, the legacy of the attacks remained contentious in the US. For the 50th anniversary of the bombing in 1995, the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, had planned a special exhibit. But it was cancelled amid public furore over sections of the display that explored the experiences of Japanese civilians and the debate about the use of the atomic bomb. US veterans groups argued that the exhibit undermined their sacrifices, even after it underwent extensive revision. 'The exhibit still says in essence that we were the aggressors and the Japanese were the victims,' William Detweiler, a leader at the American Legion, a veterans group, told The Associated Press at the time. Incensed members of Congress opened an investigation, and the museum's director resigned. The exhibit, meanwhile, never opened to the public. All that remained was a display of the Enola Gay, the aeroplane that dropped the first atomic bomb. Erik Baker, a lecturer on the history of science at Harvard University, says that the debate over the atomic bomb often serves as a stand-in for larger questions about the way the US wields power in the world. 'What's at stake is the role of World War II in legitimising the subsequent history of the American empire, right up to the current day,' he told Al Jazeera. Baker explained that the US narrative about its role in the defeat of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan — the main 'Axis Powers' in World War II — has been frequently referenced to assert the righteousness of US interventions around the world. 'If it was justifiable for the US to not just go to war but to do 'whatever was necessary' to defeat the Axis powers, by a similar token, there can't be any objection to the US doing what is necessary to defeat the 'bad guys' today,' he added. A resurgence of nuclear anxiety But as the generations that lived through World War II grow older and pass away, cultural shifts are emerging in how different age groups approach US intervention — and use of force — abroad. The scepticism is especially pronounced among young people, large numbers of whom have expressed dissatisfaction with policies such as US support for Israel's war in Gaza. In an April 2024 poll, the Pew Research Center found a dramatic generational divide among Americans over the question of global engagement. Approximately 74 percent of older respondents, aged 65 and up, expressed a strong belief that the US should play an active role on the world stage. But only 33 percent of younger respondents, aged 18 to 35, felt the same way. Last month's Pew poll on the atomic bomb also found stark differences in age. People over the age of 65 were more than twice as likely to believe that the bombings were justified than people between the ages of 18 and 29. Yam, the Pew researcher, said that age was the 'most pronounced factor' in the results, beating out other characteristics, such as party affiliation and veteran status. The 80th anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing also coincides with a period of renewed anxiety about nuclear weapons. US President Donald Trump, for instance, repeatedly warned during his re-election campaign in 2024 that the globe was on the precipice of 'World War III'. 'The threat is nuclear weapons,' Trump told a rally in Chesapeake, Virginia. 'That can happen tomorrow.' 'We're at a place where, for the first time in more than three decades, nuclear weapons are back at the forefront of international politics,' said Ankit Panda, a senior fellow in the nuclear policy programme at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a US-based think tank. Panda says that such concerns are linked to geopolitical tensions between different states, pointing to the recent fighting between India and Pakistan in May as one example. The war in Ukraine, meanwhile, has prompted Russia and the US, the world's two biggest nuclear powers, to exchange nuclear-tinged threats. 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'It should be whether it will work in perpetuity.'

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