SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend....

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Sully- who wrote (1986)4/21/2004 5:53:24 PM
From: Sully-   of 35834
 
Big news brewing in Japan?

The American Thinker
April 21st, 2004

<font size=4>
Almost unnoticed by the American press, the aftermath of Japan’s hostage crisis in Iraq is developing in a direction which may have permanent and serious positive implications for American foreign and military policies.

Prime Minister Koizumi’s response to the kidnapping of the first three Japanese taken hostage in Iraq marked a watershed in Japan’s posture for dealing with external threats. Prime Minister Koizumi simply refused to “go Spanish” in the face of terror threats against his citizens. As the Wall Street Journal notes (link requires subscription), Japan had previously embraced the notion that the lives of hostages must be paramount. In the words of former Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda, who capitulated to Japanese Red Army airplane hijackers, “human life is heavier than the Earth."

Having watched the Red Army metastasize into a far larger and bloodier threat in the aftermath, Japan has learned some lessons. The specter of a nuclear-armed North Korea lobbing missiles over the Japanese Archipelago has also done wonders for the strengthening of the Japanese national spine.

Despite large public anti-war demonstrations and tearful pleas from relatives of the hostages, the public has been strongly backing Koizumi's tough stance.

Now, a steady stream of news, much of it leaked from
governmental sources, is hinting that the first three
hostages may have faked their kidnapping. If and when
these suspicions becomes provable, the public backlash in
Japan against the anti-war left could be fearsome, and
drive Japan’s foreign policy even further toward muscular
collaboration with American defense efforts. Given Japan’s
formidable economic and technological resources , the
coalition of the willing would benefit substantially for a
long time to come.

We have reported (here and here) on previous evidence
supporting speculation that the first kidnapping incident
might have been fabricated by the left-leaning war
opponents, in order to pressure the government of Prime
Minister Koizumi into withdrawing Japan’s forces in Iraq,
or at least embarrass his administration. They were
purportedly seized by a previously-unknown group shortly
after arriving in Iraq from Jordan. The Koizumi government
indeed was subjected to mass demonstrations by Japanese
anti-war groups, and tearful pleas from hostage relatives,
urging that Japan withdraw from the coalition forces, as
Spain has just done.

The left-leaning daily newspaper Asahi Shimbun now reports
that the three activists have been treated very
differently by the Japanese government than another group
of two hostages, released shortly after the first group
was freed. While the first group of three were
hermetically shielded from the press, and were taken back
to Japan under guard, prevented from interacting with, or
even being photographed by the press while flying on a
commercial airliner (in coach, it must be noted), to face
police questioning, the second group has been free to
speak with the press while in Dubai, and under no official
constraints on where they go and with whom they speak.

Kyodo News Service of Japan reports that the Japanese government plans to charge the three hostages for the costs of the chartered airplane which took them from Iraq to Dubai immediately after their release. The government reckons this bill at 660,000 yen (approximately $6000). Meanwhile, the Asahi quotes a senior ruling party official as saying that the total cost to the government of the incident is about two billion yen (approximately $18.46 million dollars), which some influential politicians want to bill directly to the families of the hostages, if only for symbolic value.

Various politicians have gone on the record with harsh
words for the three hostages. Fukushiro Nukaga, chairman
of the Liberal Democratic Party's Policy Research Council,
said

``The families above anything else should say they are
sorry for causing such trouble, and their initial request
for the government to pull the Self-Defense Forces out of
Iraq is questionable,'' Kiichi Inoue, state minister in
charge of disaster prevention, told reporters. ``Since
they caused a lot of trouble for many people, they should
acknowledge their responsibility.''


``This may sound harsh, but people must take into consideration that they are responsible for themselves before they act,'' education minister Takeo Kawamura told reporters. ``In a way, this is an educational issue.''

Such conspicuous lack of sympathy is in marked contrast to the words of US Secretary of State Colin Powell, who
said the freed hostages should be commended for putting their lives at risk for the ``greater good,'' according to Kyodo News.

``I am very pleased,'' Powell said in an interview with Tokyo Broadcasting System reported by Kyodo. ``I was very worried about the Japanese hostages and I am so pleased that they have been released and that they are safe.''

Powell said the three Japanese should be commended for their activities in Iraq.

``If nobody was willing to take a risk then we would never move forward, we would never move our world forward.''

Most interesting of all is word leaked from police
sources, based on interrogation results, that the hostages
were actually instructed to pretend to be scared. Kyodo
News Service reports

Iraqi militants asked three Japanese nationals to pretend
to be scared when videotaping them after kidnapping them
earlier this month, Japanese police sources said Tuesday
after interviewing the trio.

The video showing the three being threatened with knives and guns was broadcast on the Al-Jazeera TV news channel on April 8 as part of the kidnappers demand that Japan withdraw its Self-Defense Forces troops from Iraq.

Stay tuned. The Japanse are paying close attention. Fully forty percent of the population watched live coverage of the release of the three hostages.

Like everyone else, the Japanese deeply resent deception
intended to maniputlate their emotions. Japan’s national
will to defend itself, once mobilized, is extremely
formidable. No one, least of all Japan’s Asian neighbors,
doubts Japan’s capability to become a serious military
power, once the will is present. Fortunately, this time
around, Japan is firmly anchored to the cause of human
freedom and democracy.
<font size=3>
Thomas Lifson

americanthinker.com
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext