• Mon
  • Oct 21, 2013
  • Updated: 7:03am

Yasukuni Shrine

Yasukuni Shrine, located in Tokyo, Japan, is dedicted to over 2,466,000 Japanese soldiers and servicemen who died fighting on behalf of the Emperor of Japan in the last 150 years. It also houses one of the few Japanese war museums dedicated to World War II.The shrine is at the center of an international  controversy by honoring war criminals convicted by a post World War II court including 14 'Class A' war criminals. Japanese politicans, including prime ministers and cabinet members have paid visits to Yasukuni Shrine in recent years which caused criticism and protests from China, Korea, and Taiwan. 

NewsAsia
JAPAN

Kerry visit to Tokyo cemetery seen as US message over Yasukuni Shrine

John Kerry's laying of wreath at war graves cemetery in Tokyo seen as an example to hosts, whose visits to war shrine stir regional tensions

PUBLISHED : Friday, 04 October, 2013, 12:00am
UPDATED : Friday, 04 October, 2013, 4:20am

US Secretary of State John Kerry laid a wreath at a Tokyo cemetery yesterday, in an apparent American attempt to nudge Japan away from lionising its controversial Yasukuni Shrine.

Kerry and Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel became the most senior foreign dignitaries to pay their respects at Chidori ga Fuchi, a cemetery near Tokyo's Imperial Palace, since the Argentine president in 1979.

What's worrying America most is the fierce row among Japan, South Korea and China over the Yasukuni issue. Visiting a more neutral place may be a message from Americans

The visit had been instigated by the US and had not come about as a result of a Japanese invitation, a cemetery official said.

US defence officials said the cemetery was Japan's "closest equivalent" to the US military's Arlington National Cemetery.

That view contradicts hawkish Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has likened Yasukuni, where 14 "Class A" war criminals are among the 2.5 million enshrined, to the US national cemetery in Virginia.

During a visit to the US in May, he told Foreign Affairs magazine that the shrine, seen throughout East Asia as a symbol of Japan's militarism, was a tribute to those "who lost their lives in the service of their country".

"I think it's quite natural for a Japanese leader to offer prayer for those who sacrificed their lives for their country, and I think this is no different from what other world leaders do," he said.

Abe, who was also prime minister from 2006 to 2007, has stayed away from the shrine thus far, amid angry denunciations by China and South Korea of visits by his ministers.

Around 100 lawmakers, including three cabinet ministers, went to the shrine on August 15 this year.

While the prime minister stayed away, he sent an offering with an aide.

Unlike Arlington, Yasukuni's caretakers promote a view of history that is controversial even at home, with the accompanying Yushukan museum staunchly defending much of Japan's wartime record.

A US official said Kerry and Hagel were paying tribute at Chidori ga Fuchi in the same way "Japanese defence ministers regularly lay wreaths at Arlington".

Kerry and Hagel signed a guest book at a small pavilion, and placed flowers on a big ceramic coffin located above an underground ossuary in which remains are kept.

Seki Tomoda, an expert on international politics, said the wreath-laying could be Washington's attempt to help East Asia overcome the obstacle caused by the Yasukuni issue, by conferring legitimacy and respectability on Chidori ga Fuchi.

"What's worrying America most is the fierce row among Japan, South Korea and China over the Yasukuni issue," he said.

"Visiting a more neutral place may be a message from Americans ... they want the three countries to ease their confrontation."

Chidori ga Fuchi was established to house the remains of unidentified Japanese who died during the second world war.

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This article is now closed to comments

onedistrict
Kerry & Hagel looked so happy in that photo ??!!
chinook
@jenniepc giving a visit to a shrine that means that US forgot the what the Japanese do the pow and respect war criminals is noting then a slap to the asia victims in WO2 by the Japanese military. I don't think there is even a nazi cemetery and never will be. The cemetery contain "Class A" war criminals wich means there is also "Class B" criminals among them and still guilty to the dead of millions Asia people.
jenniepc
I do not think that Asian countries, especially China and Koreas, as Japan slaughtered millions of Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese and other Asian nationalities, care if Secretary of State John Kerry and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel became the most senior foreign dignitaries to pay their respects at Chidori ga Fuchi, a cemetery near Tokyo's Imperial Palace as long as "Class A" war criminals not buried together among those Japanese unidentified servicemen during the War II.
I do not think that America and Israel or even France or Britain will tolerate if German government or other world leaders pay their respects at those German Nazi cemetery. Again, the atrocity committed by Japanese during WWII was much worst and brutal than then Hitler’s Nazi regime in Germany. If you were a Nazi prisoner of war you faced a 4% chance of not surviving the war; (by comparison) the death rate for Allied POWs held by the Japanese was nearly 30%.
Jennie PC Chiang/江佩珍 10/04/13 美國

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