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Switching a National Psyche From War to Peace - Japanese Style

by: Ann Wright, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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Mount Fuji, Japan, is an international icon of tranquility.
(Photo: T. Yamamoto)

    I've been speaking throughout Japan for the past 14 days on issues of war and peace and the Japanese Constitution. That Constitution was imposed by the United States after World War II and mandated the Japanese government and people abandon war. Article 9 of their Constitution says:

Aspiring sincerely to an international peace based on justice and order, the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling international disputes. (2) In order to accomplish the aim of the preceding paragraph, land, sea, and air forces, as well as other war potential, will never be maintained. The right of belligerency of the state will not be recognized.

    On my last evening in Japan, I spoke in Nago, Okinawa, the southernmost island of Japan and the most US-militarized. After the talk, in contrast to most evening meals, Hisae Ogawa (the organizer of my visit) and I had dinner with five men, all my age, 61 or so, Vietnam veteran age - except they were not Vietnam veterans, nor veterans of any war.

    After World War II, Japanese men (and women) have been spared the obligation of serving in any wars. Because their Constitution (written by Americans) says war is not the Japanese national doctrine for resolving international disputes or for ensuring their national security, the Japanese people have been given 60 years of peace.

    I was struck by the questions of the Japanese men - only one generation removed from their fathers, who fought to expand economic resources for the Japanese emperor and empire in the late 1930s and 1940s.

    These men questioned why young men and women of the United States would join the US military when it was fighting a war for economic resources (oil - their words) and a war based on lies (their words.) The Japanese men were amazed by the levels of post-traumatic stress disorder (80 percent) in Iraq war veterans, and were astounded by the Veterans Administration's cover up of the number of suicides by veterans (18 per month, or 216 per year, and 12,000 per year attempting suicide). They also questioned why any woman would join the military when statistics reveal one in three women in the military will be raped by fellow service members during their enlistment.

    I responded that, despite an unpopular war, some young men and women find the US military their only option for jobs and future education. Military recruiters flood high schools, and there are few other options for many with marginal grades, much less a criminal record.

    The Japanese society has moved from one of the most militaristic and warlike in the 1930s and 1940s to, now, a nation at peace despite the Bush administration's pressure on the Japanese government for military and financial contributions for the war on Iraq and the "war on terror."

    Some will say the reason the Japanese people have not had to go to war is the United States has taken on the role of defending Japan from attack. Yet, most Japanese would ask pointedly, "Attack from whom? From those the United States threatens?" They say, "Let us live in peace and our example will hopefully make the entire world more peaceful."

    I wonder if it will take a series of disastrous events such as what the Japanese people endured when they were led by civilian and military leaders into successive invasions and brutal occupations of other countries (known for rape and torture of local citizens) before Americans will decide aggressive wars of choice, invasions and occupations known for rape and torture of local citizens are not the answer to world problems.

    Japanese are very protective of their right to a peaceful country.

    Will American ever strive for a different world - one of peace, not violence?

governments' policies.

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Ann Wright is a 29-year US Army Reserves veteran who retired as a colonel. She was a US diplomat, who served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somali, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Mongolia and Afghanistan, where she helped reopen the US Embassy in December 2001. She has traveled to Gaza twice in the past three months and will make her third trip in May 2009. She is the co-author of "Dissent: Voices of Conscience."

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In 1997, I attended the

In 1997, I attended the costume party-opening of a cinematic makeup effects school. I was shocked that a beautiful Nipponese student attended, where she had 'altered' half of her face in a horrific fresh melt... as a peace protest. While I was disturbed that she contrived to hide half her face until she wished to dramatically 'reveal' in conversation with non-Asians... I was more disturbed to realize... that when she looked into the face of a non-Caucasian... she saw those who had burned her people alive by the hundreds of thousands. When we realize that the US has aerial bombed about 26 nations... & Laos was never a declared war... ... we have to realize that a "democracy" means we are as individually culpable for our nations actions as we are our own... it wouldn't be a "democracy" if we individually & collectively failed to admit blame. There is no sustainable Peace or collective prosperity, if we fail to appreciate the logical fallacy of a conflict-supported 'zero-sum game' propaganda's response to economic, ecological & social resource allocation. "Whenever I consider the origin of this war and the necessities of our position, I have a sure confidence that this day, and this union of yours, will be the beginning of Freedom to the whole of Britain. To all of us slavery is a thing unknown; there are no lands beyond us, and even the Sea is not safe, menaced as we are by a Roman fleet. And thus in war and battle, in which the brave find Glory, even the coward will find safety. Former contests, in which, with varying fortune, the Romans were resisted, still left in us a last hope of succour, inasmuch as being the most renowned nation of Britain, dwelling in the very heart of the country, and out of sight of the shores of the conquered, we could keep even our eyes unpolluted by the contagion of slavery. ... Here at World's End, on its last inch of Liberty, we have lived unmolested to this day, defended by our remoteness & obscurity... But there are no other tribes to come; nothing but sea and cliffs and these more deadly Romans whose arrogance you cannot escape by obedience and self-restraint. Robbers of the World, now that the Earth falls into their all-devastating hands, they probe even the Sea; if their enemy have wealth, they have greed... (neither) East nor West has glutted them... To plunder, butcher, steal, these things they misname Empire: they make a Desolation and they call it Peace." ~ Tactitus, 'The Agricola', "'Calgacus' speech' at Mons Graupus, 79AD" ┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄ BlueBerry Pick'n can be found @ ThisCanadian ┄┄ "We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid. ┄┄ "Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced" ┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄

You may be interested in a

You may be interested in a new book "From Japan With Love" by Mary A (Kiddie) Ruggieri, ISBN 978-0-9798757-1-7. Filled with pictures from the early postwar era and her personal letters to family and sweetheart, the book recounts the true experiences of a young WAC in Japan in the 1946 - 1948 period. My own experience with Japan began nearly a decade later at a time when Japan was still down but regaining spirit. Today the situation is ??

Another book: "From a Ruined

Another book: "From a Ruined Empire", by Otis Cary. US Naval Intelligence officers fanned out across Japan and China immediately before and after war's end. They kept in touch via short notes, and Cary collated them and published them. To me, they are absolutely fascinating contemporaneous accounts of the Occupation, as they called it. Particularly affecting are the accounts of the Japanese-American officers, looking up old relatives and family hometowns.

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