Newsletter
No. 51
July 31, 2005
Two
reports have recently appeared on the internet dealing with the
GSDF mission in Iraq.
The
first of these comes from Juan Cole’s Informed Comment
of July 30th. Professor Cole has reported on the latest developments
on the ground in Samawa (thus saving me the need of writing a
very similar report). Also, it is nice to hear, however briefly,
Cole’s impressions of the Japanese mission in Samawa.
The
second report comes from John De Boer (Shingetsu Member No. 37).
De Boer is currently based at Stanford University, and among his
other activities he writes for GLOCOM Platform. On July 27th,
De Boer published a fascinating report at GLOCOM on the SDF mission
entitled: “Japan and the Occupation- Reconstruction of Iraq:
The Re-emergence of an Ideological Agenda?” The original
article can be found at the GLOCOM website as U.S. Report No.
29.
JUAN
COLE’S INFORMED COMMENT
July 30, 2005
Kyodo
News reports, regarding the southern Shiite city of Samawah,
pop. 124,000, the capital of oil-rich al-Muthanna Province:
"Two
explosions took place at a job training center for women in the
southern Iraqi city of Samawah Friday morning, but no one was
injured, local police said. The Japanese government provided sewing
machines and computers through the United Nations Development
Program to the facility, operated by a local women's group. The
Japanese Self-Defense Forces have been involved in reconstruction
activities in the city."
There
have been a number of demonstrations in Samawa during the past
week. Last Sunday, the Sadrists there demonstrated against the
lack of electricity. There was also a bombing of a jewelry shop
belonging to the Iraqi head of an Iraqi-Japanese frienship association.
On
last Monday, they demonstrated again, mentioning the high price
of ice and the lack of potable water, according to AP: "Hundreds
of Iraqis burned a Japanese flag Tuesday and called for Tokyo
to remove its troops from the country in a protest that seemed
motivated by the poor state of water and electricity supplies
here more than two years after the fall of Saddam Hussein. The
peaceful protest in this city 240 kilometers (150 miles) south
of Baghdad appeared to have been organized by followers of radical
Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr." They burned the Japanese
flag.
Note
that the Japanese contingent in Samawah is helping with local
health and community development projects, so the demonstration
seems particularly misplaced. Ironically, the Japanese contingent
is suffering from the spillover of anti-American sentiment.
GLOCOM
U.S. Report No. 29:
Japan
and the Occupation- Reconstruction of Iraq: The Re-emergence of
an Ideological Agenda?
By
John De Boer
Japan's
military presence in Iraq is largely understood as being principally
motivated by Japan's desire and need to maintain good relations
with the United States. Japan depends heavily on its alliance
with United States as a guarantor of its national security. Much
of the discussion surrounding Japan's historic decision to send
troops abroad without UN sponsorship for the first time since
1945 has been based on the interpretation that Japan has acquiesced
to US demands as a quid pro quo for US involvement in East Asia,
in particular in the conflict with North Korea.
Along
these lines, some analysts have argued that Japan and the US are
involved in a "historic task of modernizing developing nations."
In other words, that they are jointly engaged in a program that
seeks to develop Iraq's economy, nourish its democracy and spread
the rule of law to every corner of social life. Analogies to Japan's
transformation during the US-led occupation that lasted from 1945-52
are often drawn as a way to demonstrate that radical and positive
change is possible.
Yet,
this is not the primary argument used by the Japanese government
to justify its participation in the occupation-reconstruction
of Iraq. It is interesting to note that to a domestic population
that opposed the US-led attack on Iraq by four to five and continues
to hold an unfavorable view of Japan's military presence in Iraq,
the Japanese government has gone to great lengths to present its
participation in the occupation-reconstruction of Iraq as distinct
from that of the United States. Significantly, this message is
also being spread to the Muslim world as a whole, and to Iraqis
in particular.
The
justification put forward by the Japanese government is in part
a response the perceived bankruptcy of America's ideological and
moral persuasiveness around the world due to abuses and torture
witnessed at Abu-Ghraib prison in Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
as well as to the heavy toll that the invasion and the continued
occupation of Iraq is having on civilians.
So
what is this autonomous discourse that the Japanese government
is selling to its public and to those in the Islamic world? The
message is one of "Modernization without Westernization":
a form of modernization that combines Western technology with
the values of the East. It is a program of modernization that
also sets out to preserve cultural and religious traditions.
With
the explicit purpose of promoting a readily identifiable international
ideology for Japan that is distinct from the United States, the
Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA), has established a
Department of Public Diplomacy within MOFA, equipped with a $400
million budget.
Reminiscent
of the series of discussions taken up by the Kyoto School on the
theme of kindai no chokoku (overcoming modernity) in
the 1940s (which served weaken the perception that Japan was a
colonizer), this organ seems to be trying to reposition Japan
as uniquely situated to develop an alternative modernity to the
materialistic Euro-American model because it was the only nation
in Asia to modernize successfully while retaining the spirit of
the East.
Toward
that end, Japan is promoting Judo in Iraq, a martial art constructed
in the Meiji period as a part of a strategy aimed at preserving
the spirit of Japanese style of thinking. The government is also
funding the broadcasting of Japanese postwar dramas and documentaries
into Iraq, including Oshin and Project X, which
tell the tale of Japan's rise from the ashes in WWII. All of this
indicates that Japan is trying to speak in a language that differentiates
itself from the West.
Japanese,
officials and intellectuals are well aware that the concept of
"modernization without Westernization" resonates with
leaders in Islamic countries. At the 2005 World Economic Forum,
for instance, the Prime Ministers of Pakistan, Egypt, Iran and
Turkey all agreed that the challenge for Islamic countries was
how to modernize without Westernizing. Japanese hope to sell the
idea that their experience "can bridge the gap between Islam
and the West."
The
Japanese government has put this motto into action by hosting
former Afghan warlords, Iraqi officials and other authorities
from primarily Arab countries in Japan to witness the success
of Japan's rise from the ashes. A series of seminars that seek
to deepen mutual understanding between Japan and the Islamic world
have also been held since 2002. These seminars are co-hosted by
MOFA, various prefectures and the Japan Foundation. The stated
objective is to "foster mutual understanding" and do
so in a manner that once again stresses Japan's unique approach
to the Arab and larger Islamic world.
These
initiatives are evidence of concrete efforts to differentiate
Japanese policy from US objectives in Iraq. Through public diplomacy,
Japan is aiming to carve out an alternative image for itself from
the US. Stressed is the image of Japan as a model for a form of
modernization that does not sacrifice identity, values and culture.
This is a powerful universal message aimed at distinguishing Japan's
presence in Iraq from that of the US.
This
is a discourse unheard in the US and it demonstrates Japan's ability
to employ a complex approach to its foreign relations. It also
exhibits the difficult political position that Japan finds itself
in today as its government responds to pressure from the US, from
its population and from people and governments in the Islamic
world.
Finally,
worrisome is the fact that Japanese government officials are becoming
increasingly comfortable with the idea of promoting an ideological
agenda that is reminiscent of the discourse it used to justify
colonialism in Asia. Although government sources and officials
assure us that this will not be the course that Japan takes in
the future, we in the public sphere have the responsibility to
be conscientious of this danger and to actively preach against
Japan heading in that direction.
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