
The Illusion of “Rising Nationalism”: Internationalism and Xenophobia in Today’s Japan
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The Principle of International Cooperation and the Issue of Collective Self-Defense
If we look back at the history of postwar thought, we find that even at the time the current Constitution was adopted, some took the position that the right of collective self-defense was in keeping with the principle of international cooperation set forth in the document. A good expression of this view is seen in the speech delivered by Nanbara Shigeru (1889–1974), a political philosopher, in the House of Peers on August 27, 1946, questioning the government about the draft of the new Constitution. Nanbara (also spelled Nambara) was an intellectual who espoused pacifism grounded in Immanuel Kant’s “Perpetual Peace: A Philosophical Sketch”; he is famous for his enthusiastic advocacy of East-West coexistence and neutrality for Japan during the Cold War years.
In his speech, Nanbara expressed doubt about the renunciation of “war potential” set forth in Article 9. His first concern was that this provision would negate the Japanese state’s right of self-defense. But as a more important consideration, he asserted that Japan must take part in collective security activities in order to implement the principle of international cooperation contained in the preamble to the Constitution, which declares, “We believe that no nation is responsible to itself alone.” Nanbara pressed the question of what Japan would do in this connection if it became a member of the United Nations:
“The members of the United Nations have the obligation to contribute their military potential to its military organization. I want to ask if we are proposing to renounce this obligation as well as these rights [of self-defense] if Japan becomes a member of the United Nations in the future. Is there not a danger that Japan will sink into an Oriental spirit of resignation, seeking to survive by relying perpetually on the good will and faith of other nations? Will this not mean abandoning the positive ideal of cooperative contribution to the establishment of world peace through the voluntary mutual sacrifice of blood and sweat in order to protect freedom and justice for humankind?” (The original Japanese version is contained in Nanbara Shigeru chosaku shū [Collected Works of Nanbara Shigeru] [Iwanami Shoten, 1973].)
Needless to say, Nanbara’s remarks were premised on the view that the UN Security Council would function properly and that the United Nations would establish its own armed forces. So his position does not apply precisely to the current discussion of collective self-defense. And his idea that Article 9 of the new Constitution would totally negate Japan’s right of self-defense is quite different from the currently accepted interpretation.
If, however, one takes the principle of international cooperation expressed in the preamble as the starting point when reading Article 9, then one cannot interpret it to allow individual self-defense without allowing collective self-defense. Such an interpretation is inconsistent, and it casts aside the “positive ideal” set forth in the Constitution. Nanbara’s questions deliver this message to us across the years. They leave no room for arguments that the right of individual self-defense may be exercised but the right of collective self-defense is not allowed, or that Japan possesses the latter right but may not exercise it.
A more recent example of a relevant argument on this issue comes from Murase Shin’ya in the essay titled “Anzen hoshō ni kansuru kokusaihō to Nihonhō” (International Law and Japanese Law Relating to Security), contained in his book Kokusaihō Ronshū (Collected Articles on International Law [Shinzansha, 2012]). Murase argues that now, given the development of various forms of collective defense arrangements in lieu of UN armed forces, along with the advance of UN peacekeeping operations, the exercise of the right of collective self-defense based on policy decisions should be permitted, with certain limitations. And Hosoya Yuichi, drawing on earlier research, has brought to light the fact that the government’s current interpretation of the Constitution to forbid exercising the right of collective self-defense emerged as the product of bartering between the ruling and opposition parties in the Diet during the 1960s (“Shūdanteki jieiken o meguru sengo seiji” [Postwar Politics Concerning the Right of Collective Self-Defense), IIPS Quarterly, vol. 5, no. 2 [April 2014]).
Of course, opinions may differ with respect to the relationship between the explicit provisions of Article 9 and the rights of individual and collective self-defense. But the idea of allowing the exercise of the right of collective self-defense is not the product of the “nationalism” of Prime Minister Abe as an individual. On the contrary, it seems to me that this endeavor may be seen as a continuation of the unbroken, albeit slender, current of thought dating back to Nanbara—an attempt to reconcile Japan’s war-renouncing Constitution with the positive ideal of becoming actively involved in the international community’s efforts to maintain peace.
Restraining the Rise of Crude Nationalism
Though I believe the print media is overstating the danger of rising nationalism or a tilt to the right under the current Abe administration, we cannot ignore the existence of a xenophobic movement within Japanese society, as seen in the spread of anti-Chinese and anti-Korean publications and of hate speech. Higuchi Naoto offers valuable observations on this issue in his recent book Nihongata haigaishugi (Japanese-Style Xenophobia [University of Nagoya Press, 2014]). He notes that the hate speech spewed on the streets and the xenophobic sentiments expressed in online forums are mainly directed at Japan’s ethnic Koreans, whom some Japanese equate with North and South Korea. And as an underlying factor, he identifies the persistent lack of stability in Japan’s relations with its East Asian neighbors, which can be attributed to the Japanese government’s ongoing failure to clarify Japan’s responsibility for its past colonization and belligerence.
It is certainly not true that the Japanese government and people have been avoiding responsibility for the past. For example, in 1995, on the fiftieth anniversary of the end of World War II, Prime Minister Murayama Tomiichi issued a statement apologizing for Japan’s past colonization and aggression. This statement was in the form of a cabinet decision, and subsequent administrations have continued to adhere to it. And there have been initiatives to address the issue of the “comfort women,” notably the activities of the Asian Women’s Fund. At the same time, however, it is a fact that nationalistic media and websites continue to present many comments that sneeringly reject straightforward acknowledgement of the transgressions committed by the Japanese state over the course of its modern history.
The developments that are said to represent rising nationalism under Prime Minister Abe, particularly the emergence of hate speech and the move to allow the exercise of collective self-defense, relate to the issue of how Japan intends to involve itself in the international community—how it can build cooperative ties with other nations while clarifying its stance regarding its own past. Both the government and the public should strive to turn the discussion of Japan’s alleged rightward tilt into an opportunity to address this issue seriously, while restraining the rise of crude nationalism.
(Originally published in Japanese on July 1, 2014. Title photo: Members of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces are welcomed by residents of Cebu Island in the Philippines as they participate in post-typhoon medical relief efforts, November 2013. Photo by Jiji Press.)
▼Further reading
![]() (Hosoya Yuichi) | ![]() (Kitaoka Shin’ichi) |
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China Abe Shinzō nationalism Nakasone Yasuhiro PKO Korea collective self-defense Murayama Tomiichi Article 9 Yasukuni Shrine comfort women Rightist xenophobia hate speech state secrets law Japan Constitution political thought Nanbara Shigeru wartime responsibility ethnic Koreans foreign residents