BEIJING, Sept. 2 -- As widely expected, the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ)
registered a landslide victory over the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in the
Aug. 30 election to the lower house of parliament (Diet), giving birth to a new
era in Japanese politics.
But it remains to be seen whether Japan will embrace real party politics,
which requires checks and balances between the ruling and opposition parties.
It is difficult to predict how the DPJ will fare as a ruling party under
new political circumstances and global financial crisis.
The Chinese people and media seem to have welcomed the DPJ victory. The
main reason for that is the DPJ's declaration in its election manifesto that
"visits to the Yasukuni Shrine by a Japanese prime minister are problematic".
Yukio Hatoyama, DPJ leader and most likely to become prime minister, made
his party's stance clearer before the election, saying: "If we become the ruling
party, our leaders will not visit the Yasukuni Shrine, nor intervene in China's
domestic affairs."
The Yasukuni Shrine honors Class-A World War II criminals alongside Japan's
war dead.
No matter who becomes Japan's new prime minister, the Diet will continue
its policy of "positive realism" toward China. The policy includes issues such
as U.S.-Japanese alliance, participation in East Asian affairs, regional
economic interdependence, the Taiwan question, territorial disputes and
cooperative exploration in the East China Sea.
Sino-Japanese ties should be interpreted according to the "dynamics" of
U.S.-China-Japan relations because it would provide a crucial framework for
Tokyo's national interests and stability in East Asia. A lot, however, depends
on how efficiently China, Japan and the United States put that policy into
practice.
A relatively strong U.S.-Japan alliance and very stable China-Japan ties
will help the three countries deal with problems in East Asia. The region is
undergoing a dynamic process, with the economic and political prowess of China
and Japan matching each other for the first time in history. Under such
circumstances, social interactions can only be mutually beneficial.
But there is always the fear that incidents such as last year's
contaminated dumplings' scare could mar Sino-Japanese ties temporarily. Chinese
and Japanese both tend to react emotionally to such incidents.
When Hillary Clinton, U.S. Secretary of State, visited East Asia in
February on her first foreign tour after assuming office, her itinerary brought
the skeptic out in many a Japanese politician and analyst.
They feared that the U.S. would "bypass" Japan to cooperate with China
directly to build a day-to-day interactive relationship.
Clinton visited Japan first and China last, stopping in the Republic of
Korea (ROK) in between, trying to assure the Japanese that a shift in American
policy toward U.S.-China-Japan relations was not imminent.
The US-Japanese alliance will continue to dominate Washington's strategy in
East Asia because China's economic rise and the fast pace of its development are
considered to be the largest uncertainty for U.S. predominant power and
influence even beyond the region. Nonetheless, these are not ideological but
pragmatic concerns, based on the "calculation" of U.S. national interest.
The present U.S. administration is trying to "silently contain" China
through dialogues, a functional cooperation on climate change and bilateral
trade, and issues such as the value of the yuan and regional security, including
the denuclearzation of the Korean Peninsula.
The first U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue held in Washington in
July could be seen as a "strategic progress", even though its achievement was
mainly symbolic. Since the development of U.S.-China ties does not go against
Japanese foreign policy, decision-makers in Tokyo should seek ways to co-exist
peacefully.
Sino-Japanese relations can stabilize in an interactively harmonious
"political atmosphere". The Yasukuni issue is the "bottom line" in Sino-Japanese
ties. Japanese leaders should understand that it is not only its domestic
matter. And they should know that their visits to the shrine could "freeze"
communications between Chinese and Japanese peoples and neutralize the gains
made through years of painstaking efforts.
The call of the times is for politicians of the two countries to learn from
history and adopt a realistic approach to stabilize bilateral ties.
The author is a Japanese columnist in China.
(Source: China Daily)