http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/GD23Ad01.html
Apr 23, 2005 

China, Japan should shuck victim mentality
By Fan Li 

(Used by permission of Pacific Forum CSIS) 

TOKYO - The fate of the six-party talks has been the center of attention in 
East Asia since Pyongyang's February 10 announcement that it was suspending 
participation in the talks and that it had nuclear weapons. The world holds 
high expectations for China and sees it as an indispensable player in helping 
to solve the North Korean nuclear crisis. 

Spreading anti-Japanese demonstrations and a boycott of Japanese products in 
China, however, suggest that China may have other priorities. Two weeks ago, a 
Chinese student online community launched a survey of the younger generation's 
thinking about the world. When asked which country is least trustworthy, 73% of 
the 27,000 respondents named Japan, followed by the United States, Russia and 
India. North Korea was not even on the list. 

Nuclear bombs may be hidden in North Korean leader Kim Jong-il's back yard, but 
a revised textbook that "whitewashes" Japan's wartime crimes in Asia, Prime 
Minister Koizumi Junichiro's annual visits to Yasukuni Shrine (he did not go 
this year), and a defense program that identifies China as a potential threat 
are visible. So why shouldn't Chinese be more concerned about the "Japan 
threat", especially if, judging from the old friendship between China and North 
Korea, it's very unlikely that North Korea would use nuclear weapons against 
China? 

One can argue that anti-Japanese sentiment in China is not news. But the 
backward moves between Japan and South Korea caused by territorial conflicts 
over the Takeshima Islands (Tokdo or Dokto in Korean) is a big blow to the 
honeymoon in relations since the two nations co-hosted the 2002 World Cup 
soccer final, and they appear to have undone the goodwill created by the 
culture boom known as "Han-Ryu" in Japan. If the deadlock over the sovereignty 
of the Northern Territories, occupied by the Soviet Union at the end of World 
War II, is added, it looks as if Japan is taking the lead in a fight with three 
members of the six-party-talks. 

It's not fair to force Japan to take all the blame. But Japan's recent behavior 
has complicated the atmosphere surrounding the multilateral talks on North 
Korea, which is unfortunate for Japan and the region. In Northeast Asia, 
history is not just about the past. Unresolved issues, some going back more 
than a century, cast giant shadows over the continent at a time of rapid 
economic change and shifting power balances. 

Among all the conflicts, the Sino-Japanese rift is most important, and as a 
result can threaten the peace and security of the entire world. As Deng 
Xiaoping pointed out 30 years ago, the most important bilateral relationship 
for China is Sino-Japan relations. 

The term "peaceful rise" (heping jueqi) put forward by the Hu Jintao 
administration sums up Beijing's goal of good neighborliness and global 
responsibility. However, there are doubts and concerns in Japan about how the 
terms "peaceful" and "rise" relate to each other, especially given China's 
exploratory drilling in the East China Sea, submarine incursions, and the 
exclusionary nationalism in China. At the same time, China considers Japan's 
hard work to become a "normal country" and obtain a permanent seat on the 
United Nations Security Council an excuse for failing to seriously address its 
historical disputes with its neighbors. 

In fact, these two countries are looking in the same direction: toward a 
peaceful rise. China has achieved dramatic development in recent years, and as 
it comes to play an increasing role on the international scene, as in the 
six-party talks, it is only natural for the Chinese to desire to make China 
both rich and strong, as well as to reunite the "lost territories" with the 
motherland. 

As for Japan, it is now represented by the Koizumi administration, which is 
backed by a new generation that does not feel it should be judged by 
misbehavior in the past. Many feel the time has come for Japan to play a more 
active role as the world's second largest economy, a major sponsor of the UN 
and other international institutions, and they say Japan deserves a permanent 
seat on the UN Security Council to justify and encourage its contribution to 
international peacekeeping. 


So what is the obstacle? For a win-win peaceful rise, both countries need to 
nurture a healthy national mentality. There is no greater threat to peace than 
the emergence of a major power with a "victim mentality". 


Traditionally, the Chinese take the 100-plus years beginning in the mid-19th 
century as a period of national humiliation. It was a time when the 
once-powerful kingdom was invaded and bullied by Western powers and Japan. It 
was also the time when China realized, for the first time in its 5,000-year 
history, that it was no longer a strong nation. 


These deep wounds to China's pride take time to heal. The fundamental reason 
lies in the Chinese belief that it was "the Middle Kingdom" for many centuries 
before it declined. A sense of cultural superiority has been bred in the 
Chinese people that makes it still harder for them to suffer the humiliations 
of backwardness in modern times. It seems that the Chinese care about their 
sensibilities and dignity more than anyone else. 


As China takes a greater role in global affairs, abandoning the victim complex 
is a must. Shaking off that complex does not mean that the Chinese should 
divorce themselves from history. It only means they ought to perform on the 
world stage as a normal partner, and in a more open and forward-looking mode. 


Japan must rid itself of this mental illness as well. Japan has accused China 
of harboring a victim mentality, but Japan itself is hiding in the shadows of 
the US nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It is true that Japan was a 
victim as well as an aggressor, but this does not justify Japan turning its 
back on its history of aggression. There appears to be a trend in which all 
history textbooks delete facts about "comfort women" while ensuring that they 
include the name of Yokota Megumi, the missing hostage kidnapped by North 
Korea. As a great power in Asia, Japan needs the courage to face a complete 
version of its history and it must make concrete efforts to improve relations 
with its neighbors. 


Nobody can tell whether the six-party talks are the best way to solve North 
Korea's nuclear crisis. But it is important to recognize that this is not only 
a process of negotiating with North Korea, but also a process of communicating 
among the five other countries. China, Japan and South Korea should use this 
opportunity to build a stronger coalition in East Asia. 

Key to this process is greater grassroots exchanges. Seeing is believing. It 
may seem overly simple, but one of the reasons anti-Chinese sentiment in Japan 
is not as strong as anti-Japanese feeling in China is that more Japanese have 
chances to visit China than Chinese can visit Japan. The Chinese government 
began a Japanese visa waiver program in 2003, but it's very difficult for 
Chinese to come to Japan. This is something that could be worked on and 
improved by both governments. 

A nation that forgets its past has no future. However, that nation can hardly 
move forward if it puts itself in the throes of past humiliations forever. 

Fan Li is executive director of Global Links Initiative, a Tokyo-based 
non-profit organization that promotes China-Japan-UK exchanges, and is also a 
member of the Pacific Forum CSIS Young Leaders Program. She can be reached at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] This article was used with permission of Pacific Forum CSIS. 
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

.

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



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