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Viewing cable 06TOKYO4434, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/07/06

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06TOKYO4434 2006-08-07 23:17 2011-08-26 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO3216
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #4434/01 2192317
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 072317Z AUG 06
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5097
INFO RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/USDOJ WASHDC PRIORITY
RULSDMK/USDOT WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC//J5//
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMHBA/COMPACFLT PEARL HARBOR HI
RHMFIUU/HQ PACAF HICKAM AFB HI//CC/PA//
RHMFIUU/COMUSJAPAN YOKOTA AB JA//J5/JO21//
RUYNAAC/COMNAVFORJAPAN YOKOSUKA JA
RUAYJAA/COMPATWING ONE KAMI SEYA JA
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 0124
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 7546
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 0859
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 7382
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 8661
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 3632
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 9771
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 1479
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 TOKYO 004434 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR E, P, EB, EAP/J, EAP/P, EAP/PD, PA 
WHITE HOUSE/NSC/NEC; JUSTICE FOR STU CHEMTOB IN ANTI-TRUST DIVISION; 
TREASURY/OASIA/IMI/JAPAN; DEPT PASS USTR/PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE; 
SECDEF FOR JCS-J-5/JAPAN, 
DASD/ISA/EAPR/JAPAN; DEPT PASS ELECTRONICALLY TO USDA 
FAS/ITP FOR SCHROETER; PACOM HONOLULU FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY ADVISOR; 
CINCPAC FLT/PA/ COMNAVFORJAPAN/PA. 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OIIP KMDR KPAO PGOV PINR ECON ELAB JA
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/07/06 
Part-1 
INDEX: 
(1) Defense Agency faced with difficulties in making report on North 
Korea's missile launches; US frowns on public disclosure 
 
(2) Hiroshima City's requests to Foreign Ministry criticizes missile 
defense as step leading to space nuclear proliferation 
 
(3) Japan to develop quiet supersonic transport with dream on board 
 
(4) Yasukuni Shrine part-2: Emperor being used for political 
purposes; Both rightists and leftists trying to serve their own 
interests; Thorough discussions on essential arguments needed 
 
(5) Yasukuni (Part 1): Emergency representative council meeting 
follows revelation of emperor's memo; "We must tell the public that 
the enshrinement was not Matsudaira's independent decision" "Let's 
watch the situation calmly. Separation of memorial tablets is not an 
option" 
 
(6) Editorial: Abe visits Yasukuni Shine secretly; Diplomatic, 
political controversies will never be resolved this way 
 
(7) Editorial: Abe's visit to Yasukuni taken as natural act on 
behalf of the war dead 
 
ARTICLES: 
(1) Defense Agency faced with difficulties in making report on North 
Korea's missile launches; US frowns on public disclosure 
 
NIHON KEIZAI (Page 2) (Full) 
August 6, 2006 
 
The Defense Agency has found it difficult to make a report on North 
Korea's recent firing of ballistic missiles. The agency wanted to 
release the report by Aug. 5, a month after the missile launches. 
However, the United States, a core in the role of gathering and 
analyzing intelligence on missiles launched, has asked Japan to 
abstain from releasing a detailed report. North Korea fired a total 
of seven missiles, but Japan and the United States differ in their 
respective analyses of those lunched missiles when it comes to their 
types. The agency is expected to release the report in mid-August at 
the earliest or afterward. 
 
"If that is the case, we don't have to be in a hurry." So saying, 
Defense Agency Director General Fukushiro Nukaga gave instructions 
to senior officials at his office on Aug. 4. The defense chief then 
made up his mind to move down the agency's scheduled release of the 
report out of consideration for the United States frowning on 
disclosing missile data in detail. 
 
A US early warning satellite in a geostationary orbit was the first 
to pick up North Korea's recent firing of missiles including a newly 
developed long-range Taepodong-2 ballistic missile. The United 
States does not share all of its satellite intelligence with its 
allies since its satellite intelligence is classified as top secret. 
The United States provided Japan with its satellite data. One US 
official, however, says it is meaningless to release such a report, 
reiterating that the United States cannot spill the beans. 
 
Japan's Maritime Self-Defense Force was on the alert, staging an 
Aegis-equipped destroyer in the Sea of Japan for North Korean 
missiles. The on-stage MSDF destroyer also detected and tracked the 
launched missiles. The Defense Agency is making a report without 
 
TOKYO 00004434  002 OF 009 
 
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/07/06 
Part-1 
INDEX: 
(1) Defense Agency faced with difficulties in making report on North 
Korea's missile launches; US frowns on public disclosure 
 
touching on US secrets. 
 
Japan and the United States differ in some of their analyses. This 
is one of the reasons why the Defense Agency is taking time to 
release the report. 
 
"North Korea launched two Rodong missiles and four Scud missiles." 
With this, the United States, in late July, provided the Defense 
Agency informally with findings from its analysis of six missiles 
excluding the third-launched Taepodong-2 missile. The United States 
has concluded that the first and sixth missiles were 
intermediate-range missiles of the Rodong type, and that the second, 
fourth, fifth, and seventh ones were short-range missiles of the 
Scud type. 
 
This analysis, however, differs from Japan's. According to the 
Defense Agency's analysis, the first one was a "new Scud missile" 
with a range longer than the conventional Scud-C missile that ranges 
about 500 kilometers. The Defense Agency's Defense Intelligence 
Headquarters (DIH) monitored radio waves at its six facilities in 
Japan. In addition, the DIH also took account of human intelligence 
(HUMINT) from North Korea's neighbors, such as China and Russia. 
 
Furthermore, China and Russia reportedly discovered that North Korea 
had fired more than 10 missiles, not seven. A senior official of the 
Defense Agency also admitted to that possibility. However, the 
United States is negative about the firing of more than 10 missiles 
including a new Scud missile. So the Defense Agency will not specify 
the missile types in detail. 
 
Some Defense Agency officials have raised a question about North 
Korea's "complete failure" to launch the Taepodong-2 missile. The 
United States has only said the engine burned for 40 seconds, 
disclosing nothing in detail about its data including its angle or 
landing point. "There's almost no data," one commentator on military 
affairs noted. "It's too early to conclude that North Korea failed 
to launch the Taepodong-2, unless we find out whether the 
Taepodong-2 was equipped with a guidance system," the critic added. 
 
(2) Hiroshima City's requests to Foreign Ministry criticizes missile 
defense as step leading to space nuclear proliferation 
 
AKAHATA (Page 2) (Full) 
August 7, 2006 
 
Hiroshima Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba and city assemblyman Hiroyuki Fujita 
handed a set of requests for peace to Parliamentary Secretary for 
Foreign Affairs Kiyohiko Toyama on August 6 in Hiroshima City. 
 
The proposals criticized America's self-centered implication of the 
first-strike use of nuclear weapons and its development of new 
nuclear weapons as going against the trend of the eradication of 
nuclear weapons. The requests also urged the Japanese government to 
pursue diplomacy actively for eradicating nuclear weapons under its 
constitution and to fulfill it's responsibility of preventing war 
for the world tomorrow by conveying the memories, voices, and 
prayers of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to the world, especially to the 
United States. 
 
 
TOKYO 00004434  003 OF 009 
 
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/07/06 
Part-1 
INDEX: 
(1) Defense Agency faced with difficulties in making report on North 
Korea's missile launches; US frowns on public disclosure 
 
The requests also touched on the Japanese government's plan to 
introduce a missile defense system. The requests read, "Hiroshima 
strongly fears that the missile defense plan will destabilize the 
global nuclear weapons system further, resulting in a new nuclear 
arms race in space." 
 
In response, Toyama said: "I will convey the requests to the 
(foreign) minister. Because they are comprehensive, we will respond 
to you in writing." 
 
Hiroshima City has annually made requests to the Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs and the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare (MHLW). The 
city did not submit any requests to the MHLW this year because 
Minister Jiro Kawasaki was absent. 
 
(3) Japan to develop quiet supersonic transport with dream on board 
 
TOKYO SHIMBUN (Top play) (Full) 
Eve., August 5, 2006 
 
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) will start next fiscal 
year to develop a quiet supersonic transport (QSST) plane prototype. 
The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology 
(MEXT) will earmark necessary costs in its budget estimate for next 
fiscal year. 
 
An airplane flying at supersonic speed brings about a sonic boom, 
which damages houses with their windowpanes breaking. So the 
Concorde, now mothballed, could not fly at supersonic speed over 
continents. 
 
Last September, JAXA's experimental mini-supersonic plane 
demonstrated test flights in Australia and successfully reduced its 
air resistance. Next fiscal year, JAXA will try to overcome the 
sonic boom. 
 
JAXA'S experimental plane holds down the sonic boom to half the 
level of the Concorde's as a QSST plane that can fly at supersonic 
speed anywhere. It has an overall length of 13 meters and will make 
20-30 test flights at Mach 1.4 or faster. JAXA will complete its 
QSST development by 2012. Its research cost is estimated at 20 
billion yen. 
 
In the meantime, a US venture firm has unveiled its project to 
commercialize a 12-seater QSST plane by 2013. JAXA would like to 
make its prototype's debut before the US model. 
 
JAXA envisions international cooperation with France and other 
countries for its dream plan to build a QSST plane with a seating 
capacity of 300 around 2025. 
 
(4) Yasukuni Shrine part-2: Emperor being used for political 
purposes; Both rightists and leftists trying to serve their own 
interests; Thorough discussions on essential arguments needed 
 
TOKYO SHIMBUN (Page 25) (Excerpts) 
August 4, 2006 
 
Many of those who are against the prime minister's visit to Yasukuni 
 
TOKYO 00004434  004 OF 009 
 
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/07/06 
Part-1 
INDEX: 
(1) Defense Agency faced with difficulties in making report on North 
Korea's missile launches; US frowns on public disclosure 
 
Shrine are taking the Tomita memo cautiously. 
 
Hideki Chimoto, professor of modern Japanese history at Tsukuba 
University, made a cautious remark on statements made by experts 
since the media report on the discovery of Tomita memo, "Apparently, 
there is an aspect of those who are in favor of separating Class-A 
war criminals from Yasukuni Shrine making statements for political 
purposes." Since the media reported the contents of the Tomita memo, 
many of those who are against the prime minister visiting Yasukuni 
said, "See, we told you so!" Chimoto is skeptical about making such 
remarks, saying, "They are not looking at the memo in an overall 
context." 
 
Paving the way for the Emperor's visit to Yasukuni 
 
Chimoto suspects that those who are calling for separating Class-A 
criminals from Yasukuni Shrine might want to do so in order to 
reinstate the Emperor's own visits there, and not just to bring 
about prime ministerial visits there. They want to properly 
characterize the position of Yasukuni in the framework of the 
state." 
 
Minoru Zushi, executive director of the Tokyo administrative office 
of the "Association to File a Lawsuit against the Prime Minister's 
Visit to Yasukuni Shrine as a Violation of the Constitution," takes 
a similar view to that of Chimoto. 
 
Zushi is concerned about statements made by Koga and others since 
the discovery of the Tomita memo: "Their statements are like the 
legislative arm of the state calling on the executive arm to defend 
Yasukuni Shrine. It is very dangerous. Mr. Koga and others probably 
think that even if the prime minister visits Yasukuni Shrine, it 
would be meaningless unless the emperor visits it. For them, it is 
important to pave the way for the emperor to visit Yasukuni Shrine, 
even at the cost of removing the Class-A war criminals." 
 
Chimoto, himself a member of a bereaved family, has a stock 
argument: "Those who are in favor of removing the Class-A war 
criminals, such as Mr. Koga, and Prime Minister Koizumi say that 
Yasukuni is a simply a facility to commemorate the war dead. But a 
spokesman for Yasukuni Shrine said that it is a facility to console 
the souls of the war dead and to throw light on their hidden virtue. 
It means that Yasukuni is a facility to praise those who died for 
the emperor." "See you at Yasukuni!" were the words used to send 
soldiers off to their deaths. The state cannot serve as an entity to 
console the souls of the war dead. It is the role of bereaved 
families and those who were close to the war dead to console thenm. 
The state should self-reflect on the mistakes it committed." 
 
Koichiro Tomioka, a literary critic, said: "Both rightists and 
leftists in sending messages tend to view the emperor's remarks in 
ways that suit them. This has given rise to a strange situation." He 
continued, "Media companies that have been critical of the emperor's 
involvement in politics now say that the prime minister must 
reconsider his Yasukuni visits because the emperor made those 
remarks. Or conservative people say the emperor could not have 
possibly made such remarks." 
 
Tomioka views that Japan has imposed all responsibility for the war 
 
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on Class-A war criminals. He said, "The essential problem is that 
neither the emperor nor the state has been proactive in taking an 
overall view of the war." 
 
"I heard that when sentences were handed down on Class-A war 
criminals, the emperor seriously thought of abdicating. But the 
situation did not allow him to do so. If such a situation is taken 
into account, it is hard to understand in what context the emperor 
made those remarks. Discussions are going on, mixing up the 
emperor's public capacity with his personal feelings." 
 
(5) Yasukuni (Part 1): Emergency representative council meeting 
follows revelation of emperor's memo; "We must tell the public that 
the enshrinement was not Matsudaira's independent decision" "Let's 
watch the situation calmly. Separation of memorial tablets is not an 
option" 
 
MAINICHI (Top play) (Abridged) 
August 6, 2006 
 
Yasukuni Shrine has been keeping an ostensible silence since a 
newspaper scoop revealed on July 20 a memorandum quoting the Showa 
Emperor's (Hirohito) displeasure with the enshrinement of Class-A 
war criminals at the shrine. Eight days later, on July 28, Yasukuni 
Shrine's chief priest Toshiaki Nambu, shocked by the revelation of 
the memo, called an emergency meeting of the representative council, 
the shrine's top decision-making body, to secretly discuss 
countermeasures. The meeting began at 3:00 p.m. 
 
The council meets twice a year: to approve the annual budget in 
March and the settlement of accounts in June. Priests conduct shrine 
rituals and the representative council endorses operational policy, 
priests' personnel affairs, and the enshrinement of the newly 
recognized war dead. 
 
At the meeting, Nambu, clad in a traditional Shinto costume, asked 
the representatives to actively discuss the shrine's stance. Nambu 
also handed the representative copies of the shrine's diaries 
detailing how the shrine had reported its decision to enshrine 
Class-A war criminals to the Emperor.  The council's minutes were 
stamped "top secret." 
 
The meeting was attended by seven of the 10 representatives, 
including a former supreme court chief justice, who had once ruled 
that cash offerings from state coffers was constitutional in 
response to an Ehime lawsuit, a former Health and Welfare vice 
minister, who was in charge of procedures for the enshrinement of 
Class-A war criminals at Yasukuni Shrine, and a son of a former army 
minister. Two were absent from the meeting. Japan War-Bereaved 
Association Chairman Makoto Koga has resigned as chair or the 
representative council. His successor remains undecided. 
 
The shrine's No. 2 priest Tatebumi Yamaguchi explained: 
 
"In 1966, the Health and Welfare Ministry sent us a list of names 
for enshrinement, Mr. Kazuo Aoki proposed swift enshrinement in a 
representative council meeting in 1970, and his proposal was 
approved. On October 6, 1978, chief priest Nagayoshi Matsudaira made 
the same proposal and it was again approved." 
 
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Aoki was a member of the Hideki Tojo wartime cabinet as the Greater 
East Asia minister. Aoki was detained as a possible Class-A war 
criminal but he was never indicted. Once he became head of the 
representative council, he arranged to have the executed Class-A war 
criminals elevated to Shinto deity (eirei) status. 
 
The chair of the representative council opened the July 28 meeting. 
 
Former Takushoku University President Shiro Odamura then said: "We 
should tell (the public) that the enshrinement was not something 
that chief priest Matsudaira did by himself. 
 
Former Supreme Court Chief Justice Toru Miyoshi chimed in: "They 
died for their country. People today have no right to say they must 
be removed from Yasukuni Shrine." 
 
Kyoto Sangyo University Prof. Isao Tokoro asked: "Doesn't the 
emperor's envoy come to the annual festival with the emperor's 
message?" The question was intended to confirm if the ritual had not 
changed, even after the emperor himself stopped visiting the shrine. 
The shrine replied that there was no change in that part of the 
ritual. Some members indicated that the reason for the shrine's 
reason for rejection of separation of memorial tablets of the war 
criminals was too difficult for people to  understand, and that the 
recent memo's contents had shocked the bereaved families. 
 
At around 5:30 p.m., chief priest Nambu summed up the meeting: "We 
don't know anything about the memo. Commentators are expected to 
raise all sorts of questions, so let's just watch the situation 
quietly. We will not remove the Class-A war criminals from the 
shrine, and that policy will not change. We will not be China's beck 
and call." 
 
Yasukuni Shrine is waiting for a chance to fight back regardless of 
the growing argument to separate the Class-A war criminals from the 
war dead enshrined there. 
 
(6) Editorial: Abe visits Yasukuni Shine secretly; Diplomatic, 
political controversies will never be resolved this way 
 
ASAHI (Page 3) (Full) 
August 5, 2006 
 
It has been revealed that Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe visited 
Yasukuni Shrine this spring. 
 
Abe, though, has not officially announced the visit. In a press 
conference yesterday, too, he just said: "Since this issue might 
develop into a diplomatic or political problem, I have no intention 
to say whether I went or not or whether I paid homage there." 
 
Abe is zealous about paying homage at Yasukuni Shrine. He strongly 
supports Prime Minister Koizumi's visits there. A visit to the 
shrine by a chief cabinet secretary - a pivotal post in the cabinet 
- will unavoidably turn into a diplomatic and political problem. 
Probably with the aim of avoiding such a situation, he made an 
unannounced visit to the shrine. 
 
 
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Even so, the people who expected him to pay homage at the shrine 
wanted to know about his visit. Abe, though, in order to overcome 
the two issues, might have felt it necessary to wait for the shrine 
visit to be reported later by the media. 
 
As admitted by Abe, his visit to the shrine is developing into a 
controversial political and diplomatic issue. This is not an issue 
to be silently brushed off.  As the frontrunner in the Liberal 
Democratic Party presidential race, he has the responsibility to 
explain himself on this matter. 
 
Should Abe become prime minister, there is a strong possibility that 
the issue of his paying homage at Yasukuni Shrine will never go 
away. In such a case, will he try to weather each storm by the same 
means he resorted to this time? 
 
Is that means even possible for a prime minister, who is always 
surrounded by a large number of security police and whose every 
action is under close watch by the media? 
 
This is indisputably what Prime Minister Koizumi has been doing over 
the past five years. Should Abe assume office as prime minister and 
visit the shrine in the same way, public views will continue to be 
split over its propriety, and relations with China and South Korea 
will remain strained. 
 
Those politicians who will lead Japan after Koizumi steps down are 
urged to present a clear-cut way out of the current unfortunate 
situation. It is inconceivable that a covert visit using a kind of 
loophole can be a prescription for resolving the problem. 
 
It was revealed recently that the Showa Emperor (Hirohito) ceased 
visiting Yasukuni Shrine because of his displeasure at the 
enshrinement of Class-A war criminals there. 
 
Finance Minister Tanigaki, another candidate for the LDP 
presidential election, has clearly said that he would refrain from 
visiting the shrine. The ruling party is now debating the notion of 
separating the Class-A war criminals from the shrine, and there is 
even a plan to establish a new memorial for the war dead Serious 
political efforts are underway in search of ways to resolve this 
issue and reconstruct Japan's strained relations with China and 
South Korea. 
 
Former Industrial Bank of Japan President Masao Nishimura, who is 
and Abe's uncle, noted in an article, "What is expected of the next 
prime minister," written for the July edition of the monthly Ronza, 
written just before he passed away suddenly: 
 
"The logic to justify the prime minister's visits to Yasukuni 
Shrine, where the souls of Class-A war criminals are enshrined, 
might be acceptable among we Japanese but it is totally unacceptable 
in the international community. Fully aware of the issue of war 
responsibility, the next prime minister should give priority to a 
pragmatic diplomatic approach, instead of ceasing paying homage at 
the shrine because of complaints coming from China and South 
Korea." 
 
We expect Abe to face up to this issue squarely. 
 
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(7) Editorial: Abe's visit to Yasukuni taken as natural act on 
behalf of the war dead 
 
SANKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
August 7, 2006 
 
It has been learned that Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe visited 
Yasukuni Shrine this April. Abe has certain feelings toward the war 
dead, and it is quite natural for him to express such feelings. The 
visit is also quite a reasonable act as a cabinet minister. The 
visit should not be taken up as a central issue of the Liberal 
Democratic Party presidential election campaign. 
 
Abe arrived at the shrine in a formal morning coat in the early 
morning of April 15, prior to the annual spring celebration. He 
entered his name in the shrine's visitors book along with his title 
of chief cabinet secretary and offered a tamagushi - a spring from 
the sakaki tree, which is sacred in Shinto - using his own money. He 
then stepped into the sanctuary and prayed for the souls of the war 
dead. In a lawsuit against Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi for his 
visits to Yasukuni in a similar way, the Supreme Court handed down a 
judgment against the plaintiff calling for confirmation that the 
visits are in violation of the Constitution. There is no problem 
with Abe's visit to the shrine. 
 
Even so, Abe's Yasukuni visit undoubtedly sent a strong message to 
China. In a speech at the LDP headquarters last April, Chinese 
Ambassador to Japan Wang Yi said that Japan, after then Prime 
Minister Yoshihiro Nakasone's official visit to the shrine on Aug. 
15 in 1985, had concluded with China a "gentleman's agreement" under 
which the prime minister, the chief cabinet secretary, and the 
foreign minister would never pay homage at Yasukuni. The existence 
of such a gentleman's agreement itself is quite disputable, and the 
Japanese government has not recognized it. 
 
The fact that Chief Cabinet Secretary Abe visited the shrine, in 
addition to visits by Prime Minister Koizumi, represents the 
Japanese government's denial of the agreement. 
 
Abe commented: "I would like to continue to feel that I can pray for 
the souls of the war dead and pay my respects to them." But he 
added: "Since this issue might develop into a diplomatic or 
political problem, I have no intention to say whether I went or not. 
The issue should not be made more serious." 
 
Ruling party members have come up with various responses. LDP 
Secretary General Tsutomu Takebe emphatically said: "Since religious 
 
SIPDIS 
freedom is secured under the Constitution, there should be no 
problem no matter who pay homage at the shrine. The dominant view is 
that the issue should not be turned into a political problem. There 
will be no impact on the election campaign." But former Secretary 
General Koichi Kato said: "The chief cabinet secretary is a cabinet 
member representing the government. I did not want him to go. Mr. 
Abe has rejected the judgments at the Tokyo Tribunal of War 
Criminals, so the situation is serious." 
 
As expected, South Korea has fiercely reacted to Abe's Yasukuni 
visit, a spokesman at the Chinese Foreign Ministry claiming: "It is 
 
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very regrettable." Chinese Ambassador Wang came up with this cynical 
criticism: "It is the tradition of Oriental persons to do in a 
modest way what their neighbors dislike." 
 
It is necessary to discuss the Yasukuni issue domestically, but 
politicians and the media must consider which countries will be 
pleased if the issue is made into a diplomatic problem. 
 
SCHIEFFER