http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/12/17/opinion/edfingleton.php

 


A quiet anniversary 
By Eamonn Fingleton

Monday, December 17, 2007 
NANJING: 

For observers of Sino-Japanese relations the big news in the past week has been 
that there has been no news. Although last Thursday marked the 70th anniversary 
of the beginning of the notorious Nanking massacre, political activists in both 
Japan and China have been notable - so far at least - for their restraint.

Given that the massacre, which began on Dec. 13, 1937, and continued for six 
weeks, was one of the worst atrocities in military history, the Chinese people 
would be forgiven for expressing their feelings in less muted terms. On 
conservative estimates, at least 150,000 people were annihilated in what was 
then the Chinese capital of Nanking (the city now known as Nanjing) and in many 
cases their deaths took place in circumstances of almost unbelievable cruelty 
and depravity.

Although it may be too soon to conclude that the Chinese people have forever 
put recriminations behind them, relations between Japan and China actually have 
grown considerably closer than is generally understood in the West.

The story goes back to the early 1970s, when just months after President 
Richard Nixon's historic visit to Beijing, Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka made a 
similar visit. Amid burgeoning trade links, the once icy Sino-Japanese 
relationship immediately began to thaw. Japanese corporations started making 
substantial investments in China in the 1980s and, as the years have gone by, 
Japanese officials have become ever more generous in permitting large transfers 
of advanced Japanese manufacturing technology. They have also advanced vast 
amounts of official economic aid. For decades, China has been by far the 
largest beneficiary of Japan's huge aid program.

Japan moreover has been highly effective behind the scenes in helping China 
take an ever more prominent role in world affairs. As early as 1972, six years 
ahead of the United States, Japan recognized the Beijing Communist regime as 
the true government of China. Japan went on to help China join the World Bank, 
the International Monetary Fund, and crucially the World Trade Organization.

Japan's careful behind the scenes diplomacy in support of China's WTO 
application began in the 1980s.

After the Tiananmen massacre, Japanese officials took the lead in 
rehabilitating the Beijing regime and crucially they insisted that the West 
should de-link human rights from trade policy.

Clearly Beijing has much to thank Tokyo for. However, the rapprochement has 
hardly been entirely one-sided. The Japanese have insisted on important quid 
pro quos. In particular, though this has been little reported in the West, they 
have induced Beijing to acquiesce in an intransigent Japanese policy of 
refusing to make any official compensation payments in respect of war-time 
atrocities.

Chinese leaders have also cooperated with Japan's agenda in another important 
respect: trade. While other developed nations bitterly complain about Chinese 
trade barriers, the Japanese have proved spectacularly successful in exporting 
to China. Thus, according to the CIA's figures, China now buys more than twice 
as much from Japan as from the United States and, as of 2006, actually incurred 
a deficit of $8 billion on its bilateral trade with Japan (compared with a 
surplus of $232 billion with the United States).

In a remarkable irony, evidence of the Sino-Japanese rapprochement is widely 
apparent even in Nanjing. On a visit to the city last summer I was startled to 
see how large the Japanese economic footprint had become. The best hotels 
seemed to be teeming with visiting Japanese executives. So were the best 
eateries, not least the city's many Japanese restaurants.

Meanwhile there were virtually no visible reminders of what had happened in 
1937 - at least not in the city's main commercial districts. True the city 
boasts a memorial museum but, located far off the beaten track, it requires a 
special trip across the Qinhuai river. That is not something visiting Japanese 
executives are likely to have time for. Nor is it something their pragmatic 
Chinese hosts are likely to suggest.

Eamonn Fingleton is the author of "In the Jaws of the Dragon: America's Fate in 
an Era of Chinese Hegemony," which will be published in March. 


 Copyright © 2007 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com 
 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke