Then offer a deep bow to conservative Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a man
eager to turn the Japanese military into an
ever less defensive force, fully
breach his country’s “
peace constitution,” and assumedly someday end Japan’s “nuclear allergy” when it comes to a future weapons program. In the process,
rising tensions with and increasingly
belligerent acts by China have proven helpful domestically. And give Abe special credit for the provocative way he’s been using history to push his domestic agenda and increase those regional tensions. In late December, as his first year in office ended, he paid a
30-minute visit to the notorious Yasukuni Shrine for Japan’s war dead, where 14 convicted war criminals from World War II are buried. Both the Chinese and the Koreans, brutally mistreated by Japan in those years, were horrified and
angered, though Abe, having purposely stuck the needle in,
denied that his visit had anything to do with honoring war criminals.