Los Angeles Times -- COMMENTARY
Monday, March 1, 1999
Two years ago the Justice Department began adding to its list of
suspected war criminals the names of Japanese who are believed to have
taken part in atrocities during World War II. The list is used,
among
other things, to bar undesirable aliens from entering the United States.
It has long held the names of Germans and others who were involved
in
genocidal Nazi activities or otherwise implicated in war crimes.
But
for reasons that are unclear, Washington had not previously sought
to
identify Japanese suspects, several hundred of whom are thought by
one
private research group to still be alive. Now there is a U.S.
request
for cooperation from Japan's government, and it has met with silence.
Eli Rosenbaum, the director of the Justice Department's Office of
Special Investigations, says Japan has refused to provide even birth
dates for the dozens of Japanese suspects now on the list.
This is an unusual way for an ally to act, but it is also consistent
with Japan's institutionalized reluctance to acknowledge the extent
of
the crimes committed by its armed forces and secret police before and
during World War II. Germany, or at least the West German government
before reunification in 1991, forthrightly brought before its people
the
harsh truths about the crimes committed during the Nazi era.
Japan, in
part because right-wing nationalists continue to wield strong political
influence, has largely evaded that responsibility.
Japanese textbooks for decades all but ignored the aggression and
brutalities committed in Korea, China, the Philippines and other
occupied Asian countries. Even today, the texts treat wartime
activities obliquely. It wasn't until 1992 that Tokyo finally
admitted
that thousands of Asian women had been dragooned as sex slaves by
Japanese troops. A Japanese translation of the American author
Iris
Chang's "The Rape of Nanking," documenting the 1937 orgy of mass
killings of as many as 300,000 Chinese, was scheduled to be published
in
Tokyo next month. Now publication has been indefinitely postponed,
after right-wing extremists made threats against the publisher.
George Santayana's well-known warning that those who cannot remember
the
past are condemned to repeat it is universally valid. But Japan's
problem isn't so much that it can't remember its past but that
successive postwar generations have largely been denied the chance
even
to learn that past. Japan's reluctance to honestly confront its
recent
history continues to be an insult to its victims and a grievous
disservice to its own people.