Paving the Way for a Presidential Visit to Hiroshima

Politics

Remarks by US Secretary of State John Kerry at the recent G7 foreign ministers’ meeting in Hiroshima have kindled hopes for a historic presidential visit to the site of the world’s first atomic bombing. Miyama Hideaki, a veteran journalist and civic leader living in Hiroshima, talked to us about the meaning of such a visit and his own efforts to help bring it about.

Miyama Hideaki

Journalist, president of Hiroshima Television. Born in 1946 in Toyama Prefecture. Graduated from Waseda University. Worked as Washington Bureau chief and political news editor for the Yomiuri Shimbun before assuming his current position in June 2011.

No Apologies Required

Conservative groups and some World War II veterans in the United States are adamantly opposed to such a visit, convinced that it would lead to an explicit or implicit apology for the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But Miyama stresses that an apology is not what the people of Hiroshima are after.

“As I explained to the NSC official I met with, we're not angling for an ‘apology tour.’ The hibakusha [A-bomb victims] groups have said the same thing. What we want is for Obama to follow up on his Prague appeal for a world free of nuclear weapons by delivering a powerful new message in support of nuclear disarmament. I also explained these things in a letter to Kerry's wife, Teresa Heinz, who has a lot of influence over the secretary of state.”

Nor does Miyama believe such efforts have been in vain. “They say Kerry seemed unable to pull himself away from the A-bomb exhibit. When he finally left the museum, you could see clearly his tremendous compassion for the victims. One of the hibakusha made a similar comment on camera. One could see in Kerry’s very posture how genuinely moved he was.”

Viewing Kerry’s Visit in Context

Since then, however, much of the commentary in the domestic media has zeroed in on the question of an American apology, scrutinizing Kerry’s remarks word by word and faulting him for avoiding any acknowledgment of US culpability. Miyama takes issue with this near-sighted focus. He feels that the Japanese media need to look at the situation from other angles, keeping in mind Kerry’s persistent efforts to engage the younger generation in the cause of nuclear disarmament, with an eye on the gradual change in American views on the subject.

This is not about deferring to Washington or avoiding any controversy that could affect the outcome of the US presidential election, Miyama maintains. It is about smoothing the way for a Hiroshima statement by President Obama on the occasion of the Ise-Shima summit, a unique opportunity to restore much-needed momentum to the nuclear disarmament movement.

The Hiroshima Declaration on Nuclear Disarmament and Nonproliferation issued by the G7 foreign ministers on April 11 states that “the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki experienced immense devastation and human suffering as a consequence of the atomic bombings.” The Japanese media have reported that some experts objected to the provisional Japanese translation issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, specifically the rendering of “human suffering” as hiningentekina kunan—literally, inhuman or inhumane suffering. But Miyama feels that the English and Japanese texts are basically in harmony in their emphasis on the disastrous human consequences of the bombings. “If not,” he says, “ the ministers would not have concluded their statement with the words, ‘We share the deep desire of the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that nuclear weapons never be used again.’”

Leveraging his position as a journalist, a citizen of Hiroshima, and the president of a local television station, Miyama Hideaki has helped shift the focus of domestic discourse from a passive “Will he or won’t he visit?” to a proactive proposal for an antinuclear “Hiroshima statement” by President Obama. In so doing, he is helping this nation assume a more equal and positive role in the postwar Japan-US relationship.

(Originally written in Japanese by the the editorial staff of Nippon.com and published on April 19, 2016. Banner photo: John Kerry (center left), other G7 foreign ministers, and the EU high representative lay wreaths at the cenotaph in Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Park on April 11, 2016. © Jiji .)

Related Tags

Japan-US relations Hiroshima atomic bomb G7 Summit nuclear disarmament

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