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Grasshopper
07-20-2005, 08:00 PM
I have never been one to believe there is such a thing as "Asian Americans." The reality of unique national-ethnic differences are too significant. "Asian Americans" mainly exist for White sociologists and some self important "activists" of "Asian" ancestry. But most average people are not going to ignore their particular national ancestries.

And those differences and even rivalries are even more pronounced in so called "Asia," which is a colonial Eurocentric term anyway.

The great paradox of the so called "Rise of Asia" is that it there is no rise of Asia. Instead what we can see is the rise of unique nationalities with long term histories and competitive interests.

Besides, some of these nations have more people living in them than entire multinational regions of the world.

India has more people than all of Europe and China has far more people than the entire continent of Africa.

The competition for markets, investment capital, raw materials as well as national prestige is going to continue to get more intense within Asia.

But maybe transnational capitalist interdependency will prevent actual war.

http://www.digitalnpq.org/archive/2005_summer/12_ishihara.html

Summer 2005

Japan vs. China : Asia's New Cold War

Shintaro Ishihara, one of Japan’s most popular politicians and the governor of Tokyo, co-authored the book A Japan That Can Say No with the late Sony chairman Akio Morita and An Asia That Can Say No with (now former) Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad.

http://www.economist.com/images/cities/tk/briefing/ishiharaREUTERS.jpg

Tokyo—Regional tension in Europe has largely disappeared since the end of the Cold War. In Asia, however, it is not an exaggeration to say that the region is facing a crisis with greater severity than that seen during the Cold War due to China’s insistence on establishing hegemony and its support for North Korea. The entire world could easily be dragged into a dangerous situation.

In our time, most ideologically based political endeavors have come to an end. Almost all political activities nowadays are motivated by economic interests. Although the collapse of the Soviet Union proved that the nature of communism was inefficient and inhumane, particular concepts of communism are still employed to justify political dictatorships in some countries. China and North Korea are cases in point, and they are the two major sources of instability in the Asian region today.

At a recent media conference in Beijing, Chinese President Hu Jintao reportedly stated, "In terms of ideological management, we must learn from North Korea and Cuba. Pyongyang is currently facing economic difficulties, but on a political level, it has consistently remained correct." In the present age, Hu’s remarks are surprising; they inadvertently reveal the real nature of communist rule.

China and North Korea both censor different ideas and thoughts, and exercise tight control over the freedom of speech under the strict principles of communism, which is held up as the supreme philosophy. For example, China, the protector of North Korea, has arrested self-improvement groups for preaching the elevation of life through mental and physical self-discipline taught by Falun Gong, a spiritual movement. The government has also imposed a ban on the group for its attempts to seek solidarity in a philosophy other than communism.

It is a historical fact that prior to the launch of communist rule, mainland China completely lacked a civil society throughout the Ching dynasty. Following its demise, civil strife among warring factions in China continued to cause havoc and disorder into the modern age.

Except for Hong Kong and Macau, which were under European sovereignty for almost one and a half centuries, and Taiwan, which freed itself from the legacy of Chiang Kai-shek’s repressive rule through democratization, the people of China have not had the chance to experience a civil society. Regardless of how Beijing asserts itself, or whether people in Taiwan belong to the same ethnic group as in mainland China, it is very doubtful whether Taipei wants to belong to a society under communist rule.

When we consider China’s growing global presence, it is most important to ascertain the central government’s true intent. One indicator of Beijing’s increasing presence is its persistent territorial claims and the nation’s military buildup. This hegemonic stance is outdated. China has already annexed Tibet, a region comprised of a different ethnic group with a unique culture, and continues to claim sovereignty over territories located in waters around the Philippines, Vietnam and Japan.

Beijing’s true nature can also be seen in its pretext of a "one nation, two systems" principle, under which it falsely advocates economic liberalization. If we liken the industrial process to a river, the conception of new products and the development of necessary technologies, as well as new model building, represent the upstream. Mass production forms the midstream, with the downstream indicated by the ability to widely distribute manufactured goods through effective advertising.

However, China’s economy is currently only able to function through the "midstream." The economy is dependent on excessively cheap labor provided under inhumane conditions where no labor unions are allowed to exist.

China’s recent acquisition of IBM’s personal computer division—actually no longer on the cutting edge in the United States—also symbolizes the nation’s limited ability to develop new technology on its own. For this reason, China has no scruples in its blatant pirating and counterfeiting of new products created through the economic upstream process of other nations. The World Trade Organization must be responsible for monitoring such behavior.

Although China’s growing economy is favorably seen as a new global market, it is important to be aware that this economic growth serves to maintain Beijing’s military modernization. China’s economic rise also acts to justify the authoritarian rule of the Communist Party, which has achieved success through its hegemonic stance toward the rest of Asia.

In the words of one expert on China’s economy, the nation’s uncontrolled development, much like the disorganized state of its construction sites, has caused an apocalypse of environmental destruction. For example, in some parts of the Yellow River, one of the world’s major rivers, water flow has come to a virtual standstill.

There are also countless contradictions in terms of China’s massive income gap. At a motor show held in Beijing, several Chinese millionaires vulgarly displayed their wealth by purchasing Daimler Chrysler top-of-the-line cars. In an interview afterward, one of the four customers nonchalantly commented that luxury goods are a status symbol. While several thousand new rich earn more than $930,000 (us) a year, the annual wages of the more than 1 billion poor in China barely reach $350 (us).

Despite official media restrictions, reports are coming out about such contradictions, including the whitewashing of countless acts of corruption among public servants. However, the government’s desire to maintain its one-party dictatorship prevents it from questioning the embedded level of economic corruption and the dangerous climate it has created.

Instead, the government is inciting a dangerous kind of patriotism in order to divert public frustration to foreign affairs. Both implicitly and explicitly, the government is supporting anti-Japanese sentiment by taking up the issue of wartime history between Japan and China.

Territorial disputes are often a convenient issue in the promotion of public sentiment bordering on nationalism. China has voiced outrageous claims to Japanese territory that was officially returned to Japan after its conclusion of an agreement with the US.

China also insists that Taiwan, which has a well-developed civil society, should be reunited because the Taiwanese people are of the same ethnicity as those of the mainland. China has also emphasized its justification for its recently enacted anti-secession law and the nation’s right to use military force to prevent any attempts by Taiwan to pursue formal independence. The assertion that Taiwan should be part of China is tantamount to Adolf Hitler’s view that Austria be annexed because the Austrians were of the same ethnicity as Germans.

Amid this climate of tension, the European Union is considering whether to lift its arms embargo against China, which is clearly the source of such danger.

This move derives from commercial greed on the part of European nations, rather than from their not knowing the true nature of emerging tension in Asia. As the world becomes smaller, both in physical proximity and in terms of time, the entire global community, including Europe, could easily be affected.

Many of us in civil society have been able to achieve freedom because of the great sacrifice made by forebearers. Can we really allow China, an outright defiant nation with massive political energy, to blatantly pursue its economic interests in the Asian region?

yoMAMA
07-20-2005, 08:11 PM
this ishihara guy is nuts (although quite a personality).

I wouldn't take him very seriously though :p

Napoleon Chynamite
07-20-2005, 08:23 PM
I know plenty of "Asian Americans" here that hang on more to this Asian American identity more than to their ethnic-specific roots. I know plenty that don't. I can't really speak for those that choose to identify themselves in certain ways. Bottom line is though if there are European Americans and African Americans, derrr there are Asian Americans and if some choose to band together via cultural experiences or similarities then so be it.

P.S. Yeah that Ishihara guy is pretty hilarious...even though he doesn't really mean to be.

HeyaB!
07-20-2005, 08:45 PM
Wow, what a one eyed spiel. Ishihara sounds like the type who'd get misty eyed thinking of the good old days when China was a just a big fat territorial target for evryone else's own Imperial concerns. Speaking of Imperial interests, I was surprised not to hear Rumsfeld's name mentioned in the credits, because this sounds like the Evil China crap he spouts most of the time as well.

If certain countries and individuals have such an issue with China's global rise, why don't they try persuading their own companies and investors from heading into the mainland?

Or would that get in the way of profits?

AltimaGTR
07-20-2005, 08:56 PM
http://www.economist.com/images/cities/tk/briefing/ishiharaREUTERS.jpg
"China is evil! Buy our Sony PSPs!"

Chu Chi
07-20-2005, 09:26 PM
Grasshopper,

What do you suggest Chinese PEOPLE and Japanese PEOPLE do to promote constructive interactions between themselves?


CC

chikkachikka
07-20-2005, 10:16 PM
"I have never been one to believe there is such a thing as "Asian Americans." The reality of unique national-ethnic differences are too significant. "Asian Americans" mainly exist for White sociologists and some self important "activists" of "Asian" ancestry. But most average people are not going to ignore their particular national ancestries."

wow, that last sentence could not be any more downright wrong. obviously this person needs to check their definition of "average". i have lectured many a student in china about how meiguo is one of those few countries where your nationality and ethnicity are NOT the same - anyone who thinks otherwise, or, like the statement above, believes your ethnicity DETERMINES your nationality, can only fall into one of the four categories:

a. super-patriotic nationalist asians who haven't the faintest clue about living overseas cos they spent most of their lives in caves
b. super-patriotic nationalist overseas asians bitter at their own decision to emigrate and are stuck living in their new home countries
c. super-pseudo patriotic nationalist children of B in denial of their extreme twinkieness
d. xenophobes intent on making Japanese Internment Part II.

it is not clear if the above was just cut and pasted from elsewhere, but if that is in fact the poster's statement, i can only hope this person gets the hell out of my country for my sake. i don't want my ass thrown in a goddamn chinese internment camp cos one of my so-called "own" decided to be the spokesman for the rest of us and insist that, hey, we actually ARE a bunch of foreign buck-toothed spies!

uh, thanks, but no thanks.

Grasshopper
07-21-2005, 12:17 AM
Grasshopper,

What do you suggest Chinese PEOPLE and Japanese PEOPLE do to promote constructive interactions between themselves?

CC
Educate all the women and girls, let them have good jobs and promote capitalism.

Women of all nationalities would rather shop than fight. :wink:

Except when there is a good sale and the stock is running low, then they tend to get violent. :tongue:

wow, that last sentence could not be any more downright wrong. obviously this person needs to check their definition of "average". i have lectured many a student in china about how meiguo is one of those few countries where your nationality and ethnicity are NOT the same - anyone who thinks otherwise, or, like the statement above, believes your ethnicity DETERMINES your nationality, can only fall into one of the four categories:
Ok, how about "family history" instead of national ancestry.

Do you realy think Americans of Asian ancestry are not aware of a particular "family history" that tends to have a particular national identity.

Korean, Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Vietnamese, Khmer, or even East Indian just all blend into one big happy "Asian American identity"? In the real world?

I don't agree. And that should not imply a need for hostility between these groups or betrayal of "Americanness".

it is not clear if the above was just cut and pasted from elsewhere, but if that is in fact the poster's statement,
Everything above the url was in fact a cut and past from my own fevered brain, a far off and exotic land in it's own right. I like to think of it as Land of Negative Karma. :biggrin:

Chu Chi
07-21-2005, 04:51 AM
Korean, Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Vietnamese, Khmer, or even East Indian just all blend into one big happy "Asian American identity"? In the real world?




Yeah, why not?

Thats what White people do. One big happy White American identity".

Then again, I understand why you would not want Asian people to interact in a constructive manner.


CC

Grasshopper
07-21-2005, 08:00 AM
Yeah, why not?

Thats what White people do. One big happy White American identity".
What people should do and actually do are two different things.

For one White people in America lack the racial and cultural diversity of "Asians." Europe, where most White American's ancestors come from, is more comparable to only North East Asia than to all of Asia.

Secondly throughout American history White race people could be defined racially but they often lived and organized "ethnically" based on their family history and national ancestry, just as do many Americans of Asian ancestry today.

Plus White people in America politically organize well beyond race and ethnicity whether it's the Civil War where they slaughtered each other or in current elective politics where they clump up as Democrat and Republican and compete with each other.

But I guess because you are one of the resident black posters here it's only natural that you would both not understand Asian American social arrangements and it's understandable that you would see White America as a "happy" but threatening monolith.

Then again, I understand why you would not want Asian people to interact in a constructive manner.

CC
Why did you choose to misrepresent me by leaving out the remainder of my quote?

I don't agree. And that should not imply a need for hostility between these groups or betrayal of "Americanness".

GH

VV o n g B a
07-21-2005, 08:51 AM
I have never been one to believe there is such a thing as "Asian Americans." The reality of unique national-ethnic differences are too significant. "Asian Americans" mainly exist for White sociologists and some self important "activists" of "Asian" ancestry. But most average people are not going to ignore their particular national ancestries.u are denying the existence of a political idea. u are free to deny any such idea such as that of americans in general, but the fact that many other people operate on that idea forces u to deal with it on certain levels, such as by addressing it on this forum.

similarly, just b/c germany and france didn't like each other much several decades ago doesn't mean that "europe" has no meaning today. "asia" as an umbrella term might not be as useful as more specific terms for regions in asia, but it has its uses.
And those differences and even rivalries are even more pronounced in so called "Asia," which is a colonial Eurocentric term anyway.we agree here, but who here would disagree that there are tensions between asian nations? i've also mentioned that we should move away from an all-encompassing term such as asian, but such an effort is beyond the scope of what ppl on an internet forum could accomplish.
The great paradox of the so called "Rise of Asia" is that it there is no rise of Asia. Instead what we can see is the rise of unique nationalities with long term histories and competitive interests.

Besides, some of these nations have more people living in them than entire multinational regions of the world.u are again denying the existence of a political idea. if nations in a political region called asia (whoever defines asia) are "rising," then there is a "rise of asia." the relative sizes of these nations is not relevant. the fact that a high number of them are becoming important members of the world community is. u are still relying on political boundaries that are defined by others or yourself if u mention individual nations. u might say instead that it is the rise of individual ethnicities. that at least has a bit of basis in genetic reality.

http://www.economist.com/images/cities/tk/briefing/ishiharaREUTERS.jpg
as for this guy... he himself is one of the major irritants in the relationship between china and japan. it's a little ironic that he would decry the worsening of it.

Martino
07-21-2005, 09:40 AM
Europe, where most White American's ancestors come from, is more comparable to only North East Asia than to all of Asia.

Yeah, it's very easy to confuse the cultures of Spain with Norway. If you were in Poland, it would be so easy to think you could be in Ireland. Germany and Scotland are IDENTICAL.

AliBabaIncorporated
07-21-2005, 10:05 AM
Yeah, it's very easy to confuse the cultures of Spain with Norway. If you were in Poland, it would be so easy to think you could be in Ireland. Germany and Scotland are IDENTICAL.
Looking at it from a geopolitical and linguistic standpoint, well, you've got 3 major players in NE Asia (China, Korea, and Japan) and 4 in Europe (England, Germany, France, and Russia). All the major players in Europe speak Indo-European languages (in fact, practically the entire vocabulary of English could be accounted for by input from French and German) and follow branches of the same religion. In contrast, two of the major players in NE Asia (Japan and Korea) speak languages that are even more distant from each other than English and Russian (that's not even considering Ainu); the third speaks 15+ unrelated Sinitic languages, plus Tibetan (also a member of the Sino-Tibetan family, but not in a way that's very useful to any language learners --- it's worse than the divide between the Finno-Ugric languages) along with various other Austronesian, Altaic, etc. languages. All of them share a similar overlay of Buddhism and Confucianism, but with far stronger native shamanistic/pagan beliefs.

Even in terms of diversity of language and cuisine, let alone appearance, I'd say Europe, even including all 13 time zones of Russia, is barely comparable to China, let alone all of North Asia.

Martino
07-21-2005, 12:38 PM
Looking at it from a geopolitical and linguistic standpoint, well, you've got 3 major players in NE Asia (China, Korea, and Japan) and 4 in Europe (England, Germany, France, and Russia). All the major players in Europe speak Indo-European languages (in fact, practically the entire vocabulary of English could be accounted for by input from French and German) and follow branches of the same religion. In contrast, two of the major players in NE Asia (Japan and Korea) speak languages that are even more distant from each other than English and Russian (that's not even considering Ainu); the third speaks 15+ unrelated Sinitic languages, plus Tibetan (also a member of the Sino-Tibetan family, but not in a way that's very useful to any language learners --- it's worse than the divide between the Finno-Ugric languages) along with various other Austronesian, Altaic, etc. languages. All of them share a similar overlay of Buddhism and Confucianism, but with far stronger native shamanistic/pagan beliefs.

Even in terms of diversity of language and cuisine, let alone appearance, I'd say Europe, even including all 13 time zones of Russia, is barely comparable to China, let alone all of North Asia.

Spain alone has four distinct cultures (Castilian, Catalan, Galician and Basque) each with their own distinctive languages, cultures and cuisine.

I could not even begin to count off the number of individual European ethnicities that exist across Europe, from Walloons to Romanys, Welsh to Belarusians. Then there's all the national identities and languages ...

And, funny thing is, none of us can understand the languages of the others, at least, not without a lot of schooling.

Chad
07-21-2005, 01:06 PM
I have never been one to believe there is such a thing as "Asian Americans." The reality of unique national-ethnic differences are too significant. "Asian Americans" mainly exist for White sociologists and some self important "activists" of "Asian" ancestry. But most average people are not going to ignore their particular national ancestries.

And those differences and even rivalries are even more pronounced in so called "Asia," which is a colonial Eurocentric term anyway.
You wish.

What we've got here is a white trying to emphasize our divisions and highlight rivalries. I wonder why???
"divide and conquer" but it won't work so easily anymore.
Sorry but I don't need some white person to tell me what I am and who my enemies are. I can figure this out for myself, thanks very much.
He's saying that because some politicians in Japan can't get along with some politicians in China, Asian American identity is a farce and it's hopeless that we could work together. He'd like to think so.

Napoleon Chynamite
07-21-2005, 02:19 PM
This reminds me of that one thread a while back with that one Raz Farengi guy telling us why Asian Americans "have no right" to band together, haha.

Chu Chi
07-21-2005, 07:51 PM
Yeah, it's very easy to confuse the cultures of Spain with Norway. If you were in Poland, it would be so easy to think you could be in Ireland. Germany and Scotland are IDENTICAL.


Martino, are you a White person?



CC

AngryABCGirl
07-21-2005, 08:38 PM
Uhhh.. the term Asian American rose out of Civil Rights movments in the 1960s from a pan-Asian coalition that did not want to be called Oriental because it was a name given by colonists... of course this isn't covered in your average joe mainstream history books...

yoMAMA
07-21-2005, 11:20 PM
CommentThe cockpit of future conflicts

Japan's contempt for its own continent has become a liability
Martin Jacques in Nagoya
Friday July 22, 2005

Guardian
Six years ago, when I was last in Japan, the issue of China barely ever featured during conversations. But China now looms large in the Japanese mind. It evokes a complex of emotions, from surprise and confusion to fear and defensiveness. While there is a recognition that China represents a huge economic opportunity - China has suddenly become Japan's largest trading partner and played a key role in hauling Japan out of its long-running economic malaise - that is far from the dominant emotion. Rather, April's anti-Japanese demonstrations in China have helped give expression to an intangible but growing sense of concern.

The demonstrations articulated and crystallised longer-run trends and problems. As a consequence of its staggering growth over the last few decades, east Asia is now the biggest economic region in the world. Where once east Asia was overwhelmingly preoccupied with that economic growth, its countries are now acquiring new concerns and ambitions. If east Asia is indelibly associated in the public mind with growth, it is likely in future to become increasingly characterised by growing national tensions. At the heart of this process is inevitably the rise of China, which is rapidly emerging as the region's economic centre.

Much of the British commentary on the anti-Japanese demonstrations focused on China, but this is to wilfully ignore the Japanese dimension. Over the last few years Japan has gradually moved in a more nationalistic direction, symbolised by the annual visits of the prime minister, Junichiro Koizumi, to the Yasukuni shrine - which served as a spiritual pillar for Japanese nationalism during the 1930s and 40s and now honours 14 class-A war criminals along with the war dead.

There are other small signs of a shift: the reintroduction of the national anthem in schools and the revision of history books, for example. Not surprisingly, Japan's relations with its neighbours, especially China and South Korea, have worsened in the past few years. In a recent opinion poll 83% of respondents in China said they did not have a favourable opinion of Japan, up from 67% in a 2002 survey; in South Korea the figure was 75%, up from 69% three years ago.

Japan faces a profound dilemma, one that it has barely begun to think about. Ever since the Meiji Restoration in 1868, Japan has been at pains to identify with the west and to distance itself from Asia, which it regarded as hopelessly backward. This contempt for its own continent shaped Japanese attitudes towards its wars of conquest and colonial behaviour. After Japan's defeat in the second world war, its security alliance with the US helped to reinforce and further accentuate this western tilt. I vividly recall a discussion in Tokyo in 1999 at which, in response to a question, a distinguished panel gave serious consideration as to whether or not Japan should apply to join the European Union.

For well over a century, Japan was hugely more advanced than its Asian neighbours. That situation only began to change in the 1970s with the rapid economic growth of the first Asian tigers. Since then the picture has been entirely transformed. Japan now faces an Asian hinterland that is dynamic, expansive and brimming with confidence. The post-Meiji Japanese attitude towards its neighbours has been overtaken by history. Worse, it has become a liability, preventing Japan from coming to terms with its own history and thereby also poisoning its relations with its neighbours.

Japan has, of course, been mindful of Asia's transformation. Indeed it has played an important role in the process, both as a catalyst and a model. It has also been a generous donor of aid. What it has not done, however, is to rethink its own historical relationship with, and behaviour towards, its neighbours. No country in the world ever finds it easy to apologise to others for its past conduct - because of the loss of pride involved and the internal divisions that are inevitably entailed - and Japan, until now at least, has never really been required to, except in the most formalistic of terms. Those peoples it abused - especially the Chinese and the Koreans - were simply too weak to force a change of attitude, and the US, its postwar ally and sponsor, was too busy worrying about China to attach any importance to displays of Japanese contrition. As a consequence, Japan now finds itself staring at the past as it looks into the future. This problem will not go away - on the contrary, it is destined to loom ever larger.

Many Japanese are vaguely aware of this. A majority are now opposed to Koizumi's visits to Yasukuni. But this does not mean that Japan will confront its past in a manner that would enable a new kind of reconciliation with its neighbours. This would be a huge step, in effect the beginnings of a new post-Meiji era. There is no sign of such a movement within Japanese society. Moreover, the US has little interest in such a move. On the contrary, it is busy encouraging Japan to assume a wider military role as its global partner and as a closer ally in east Asia, not least in respect of Taiwan. Far from wishing to see a rapprochement between China and Japan, the US sees Japan as its crucial ally in seeking to contain a rising China.

The line of least resistance for Japan is to move along this path and deepen its alliance with the US. It remains the most likely scenario. But it will leave Japan in an increasingly uncomfortable and marginalised position within east Asia. China is rapidly becoming the centre of the east Asian economy and region. By turning its back on east Asia, Japan is instead looking to the Asia Pacific region, the central axis of which would be the US and Japan. But in any such scenario Japan would find itself increasingly estranged from its Asian neighbours.

In Europe all this might sound rather distant and esoteric. But think of it like this. Since 1800, arguably earlier, Europe has been the centre of the world. Even after its decline following 1945, Europe continued to play this role because the cold war bisected it. The end of the cold war has finally drawn the curtains on Europe's primacy. East Asia is in the process of replacing it as the new global centre. Not only is it already the biggest economic region in the world; China and Japan are the world's second and third largest economies in terms of GDP measured by purchasing power parity. Meanwhile the US cannot afford to cede its position as the key military and security presence in the most powerful region in the world. East Asia, far from being a distant region, is the cockpit of future global trends and conflicts.

· Martin Jacques is a visiting professor at the International Centre for Chinese Studies at Aichi University in Japan

Martinjacques1@aol.com
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005

Napoleon Chynamite
07-24-2005, 08:44 AM
For one White people in America lack the racial and cultural diversity of "Asians." Europe, where most White American's ancestors come from, is more comparable to only North East Asia than to all of Asia.

Can I buy this amazing textbook from which you get all your information in stores?

CommentThe cockpit of future conflicts

Japan's contempt for its own continent has become a liability
Martin Jacques in Nagoya
Friday July 22, 2005...

I vividly recall a discussion in Tokyo in 1999 at which, in response to a question, a distinguished panel gave serious consideration as to whether or not Japan should apply to join the European Union.

hahaha

Well I guess the preconceived notion that Japan is a nation of sell-outs ever seeking to emulate the west among Asians has some type of understandable root, although admittedly many other Asian countries such as South Korea and even China haven't exactly fared much better.

Japan has, of course, been mindful of Asia's transformation. Indeed it has played an important role in the process, both as a catalyst and a model. It has also been a generous donor of aid. What it has not done, however, is to rethink its own historical relationship with, and behaviour towards, its neighbours. No country in the world ever finds it easy to apologise to others for its past conduct - because of the loss of pride involved and the internal divisions that are inevitably entailed - and Japan, until now at least, has never really been required to, except in the most formalistic of terms. Those peoples it abused - especially the Chinese and the Koreans - were simply too weak to force a change of attitude, and the US, its postwar ally and sponsor, was too busy worrying about China to attach any importance to displays of Japanese contrition. As a consequence, Japan now finds itself staring at the past as it looks into the future. This problem will not go away - on the contrary, it is destined to loom ever larger.

Many Japanese are vaguely aware of this. A majority are now opposed to Koizumi's visits to Yasukuni. But this does not mean that Japan will confront its past in a manner that would enable a new kind of reconciliation with its neighbours. This would be a huge step, in effect the beginnings of a new post-Meiji era. There is no sign of such a movement within Japanese society. Moreover, the US has little interest in such a move. On the contrary, it is busy encouraging Japan to assume a wider military role as its global partner and as a closer ally in east Asia, not least in respect of Taiwan. Far from wishing to see a rapprochement between China and Japan, the US sees Japan as its crucial ally in seeking to contain a rising China.


God has a way of elevating the weak and downtrodden above the strong and proud over time. Then the ones who have become strong in turn soon become proud and contemptuous towards the weak, and the vicious cycle continues...