Recovering Japan's Wartime Past - and Ours
By Steven C. Clemons
New York Times
September 4, 2001

 Steven C. Clemons is executive vice president of the New America  Foundation.

 WASHINGTON -- Celebrations this Saturday of the 50th anniversary of the  San Francisco Treaty of Peace, which established the postwar relationship  between Japan and the world, will focus on Japan's emergence as a pacifist  market economy under the tutelage of its conqueror and later ally, the  United States. Little attention will be paid to questions of historical  memory or of liability for Japan's behavior during the war. The 1951  treaty, largely through the efforts of America's principal negotiator,  John Foster Dulles, sought to eliminate any possibility of war  reparations. This undoubtedly cemented Japan's alliance with the United  States and helped its economic rebirth. But Dulles's and Japan's strategy  also fostered a deliberate forgetfulness whose consequences haunt us  today.

 Dulles had been a United States counselor at the Paris Peace Conference  in 1919, with special responsibility for reparations. He had opposed,  without much success, the heavy penalties imposed by the Allies on  Germany. These payments were widely seen as responsible for the later  collapse of Germany's economy and, if obliquely, for the rise of Nazism.  After World War II, Dulles feared that heavy reparations burdens would  similarly cripple Japan, make it vulnerable to Communist domination and  prevent it from rebuilding. It was crucial to Dulles that Japan not face  claims arising from its wartime conduct. The San Francisco Treaty has been  used to this day, by Japan and America, as a shield against any such  claims.

 Nonetheless, when he had to, Dulles allowed an exception, one that has  remained largely hidden. The signatories to the San Francisco Treaty  waived "all reparations claims of the Allied Powers, other claims of the  Allied Powers and their nationals arising out of any actions taken by  Japan and its nationals in the course of the prosecution of the War." But  recently declassified documents show that Dulles, in negotiating this  clause, also negotiated a way out of it.

 Dulles had persuaded most of the Allied powers to accept the treaty. One  major nation that refused to sign was Korea, because of its enmity against  Japan for colonizing the Korean Peninsula. India, China and the Soviet  Union also declined to sign.

 For a brief while it appeared that the Netherlands would do likewise. Only  days before the treaty was to be signed, the Dutch government threatened  to walk out of the convention because it feared that the treaty  "expropriated the private claims of its individuals" to pursue war-related  compensation from Japanese private interests. Tens of thousands of Dutch  civilians in the East Indies had lost their property to Japanese  companies, which had followed Japan's armies to the Indies. They wanted  compensation, and they had political power in Holland.

 European opinion mattered to Dulles, who feared that a Dutch exodus might  lead the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand to drop out as well. On  the day before and the morning of the signing ceremony, Dulles  orchestrated a confidential exchange of letters between the minister of  foreign affairs of the Netherlands, Dirk Stikker, and Prime Minister  Shigeru Yoshida of Japan. Yoshida pledged that "the Government of Japan  does not consider that the Government of the Netherlands by signing the  Treaty has itself expropriated the private claims of its nationals so  that, as a consequence thereof, after the Treaty comes into force these  claims would be non-existent."

 Article 26 of the treaty states that, "should Japan make a peace  settlement or war claims settlement with any State granting that State  greater advantages than those provided by the present Treaty, those same  advantages shall be extended to the parties to the present Treaty." This  is why the letters had to be confidential: they preserved the rights of  some Allied private citizens, in this case Dutch citizens, to pursue  reparations.

 Such an agreement, if publicized, could have opened the way for other  claims - reparations was a huge and emotional issue after the war. These  letters were not declassified until April 2000, by which time most  potential claimants were probably dead.

 In 1956, the Dutch did successfully pursue a claim against Japan on behalf  of private citizens. Japan paid $10 million as a way of "expressing  sympathy and regret." Japan had been slow about making its deal with the  Netherlands, and the United States had to remind the Japanese that, as  a declassified State Department document puts it, the United States had  "exerted considerable pressure on the Netherlands representatives with a  view to their signing the Peace Treaty," and "one of the arrangements was  assurance that the terms of the Yoshida-Stikker letters would be honored."  A year before, the British noted two other instances in which governments  had made deals with Japan for reparations: a settlement with Burma that  provided reparations, services and investments amounting, over 10 years,  to $250 million; and an agreement with Switzerland that provided  "compensation for maltreatment, personal injury and loss arising from acts  illegal under the rules of war."

 The British Foreign Ministry elected not to take any action on behalf of  British nationals - and chose not to publicize the information. The United  States concurred, with one official commenting, "Further pressure would be  likely to cause the maximum of resentment for the minimum of advantage."  Nonetheless, the Stikker- Yoshida letters and the Burmese and Swiss  agreements could all be used to make Japan, under Article 26 of the San  Francisco Treaty, offer similar terms to the treaty's 47 signatories.  The price Japan might have paid, in 1951 or later, as atonement for its  crimes would, presumably, have been high. Perhaps Dulles's public policy  was best. But it may also be that Japan, and even the United States, are  paying a different sort of price for the amnesia and secrecy that both  countries chose after the war. An American group of former prisoners of  war, for example, has pledged to protest the conferences and commemorative  galas. These veterans are pursuing financial relief for having been  enslaved in wartime by Japanese corporations, notably Mitsui and  Mitsubishi. The P.O.W.'s have already lost one case in California. The  judge, Vaughn Walker, decided that because of the success of the San  Francisco Peace Treaty and of Japan in becoming a strong ally and partner  of the United States, the waiver of individual rights to pursue private  parties in Japan was justified. This has been the argument in the dozens  of suits brought in Japan and a smaller number of cases in American  courts. And the argument has so far prevailed.

 Judge Walker did recognize that Japan's reparations deals with some  countries might present the opportunity for the signatory nations of 1951  to bring their own claims, as provided for in Article 26 of the treaty.  However, "the question of enforcing Article 26," he wrote, is "for the  United States, not the plaintiffs, to decide."

 The failure to support war claims is one of the reasons Japan is still  struggling with other nations over its history. The Germans - at least,  West Germans - have engaged in five decades of public debate about Hitler  and the Holocaust. And Germany and other European countries have accepted  the need, for their governments or their corporations, to pay reparations  for crimes very similar to those committed by Japan and Japanese companies  in the same period.

 The Japanese, however, have not witnessed the court cases and public  debates that would help shape a shared understanding of history among  Japanese and their neighbors. Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's visit  last month to the Yasukuni shrine - which honors the souls of Japan's war  dead, including the souls of war criminals - and the relentless efforts of  some Japanese textbook writers to minimize Japan's wartime aggression  against Korea and China have further aggravated regional tension over  Japan's official history. Because Japan is so ill at ease with debate  about its past, other nations understandably distrust a more powerful  Japan.

 What we know only today is that the State Department arranged a deal that  arguably allows Americans and others to pursue personal claims against  Japan or Japanese firms - but tried to keep the agreement quiet. The State  Department even filed briefs in the California court against the former  American prisoners of war. Of course, it was the State Department that  once advanced the claims of Dutch citizens.

 Japan clearly deserves criticism for its inability to debate its past  openly. However, the United States, as evidenced by the emerging  controversy about the terms of the San Francisco Treaty, has also played a  role in Japan's historical amnesia. By withholding documents on American  foreign policy, the United States has contributed to a failure of memory  that will continue to have consequences for all of us.