TOKYO, May 1 -- Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's address in the U.S. Congress could be seen as "historic" in the way that Japan would no longer offer heartfelt apology to Asian neighbors victimized by its brutal aggression and colonial rule during WWII.
Abe claimed that the postwar path Japan has been pursuing is based on "deep remorse" over the war and Japan's "actions" brought "suffering to the peoples in Asian countries."
"We must not avert our eyes from that. I will uphold the views expressed by the previous prime ministers in this regard," he told a joint session of the U.S. Congress.
In such a well-prepared speech delivered to U.S. lawmakers, Abe, however, unveiled his historical revisionism ideology by using " actions" instead of "aggression and colonial rule," and "deep remorse" rather than "heartfelt apology," in an apparent effort to dilute the country's wartime atrocities.
Abe's planned statement on the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII this summer has already triggered concerns from neighboring China and South Korea since the hawkish leader hinted that he will not repeat such key words used by his predecessors.
It is also giving clearer clues about what Abe will talk about months later at home. With applause in the U.S. Capitol, Abe believes he has got Washington's acquiescence in his high-profile address to cripple the much-recognized 1995 Murayama Statement.
What should top the U.S. agenda in Asia is to encourage Japan to reconcile with its neighbors, rather than indulge in its "pivot to Asia" in an irresponsible way and further embolden the right- leaning Abe government, either intentionally or unintentionally.
Such miscalculations will risks peace and stability in the entire region, and escalating tensions between Japan and its neighbors will also jeopardize U.S. interests.
The Japanese leader must also understand that Japan, as a country that inflicted tremendous pain and damage to Asia during WWII, should first seek reconciliation with its Asian neighbors.
Unfortunately, the two allies are heading in a direction misguided by a newly-revised defense guideline, which will allow Abe to upgrade Japan's Self-Defense Forces to handle disputes with its neighbors and meddle in regional affairs in a saber-rattling way.
Without offering an apology, Japan lost another chance to mend ties with its neighbors, thus clouding the future in East Asia.
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