WORLD BRIEFINGS
By Takehiko Kambayashi
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
August 18, 2006
TOKYO -- On Tuesday, the 61st anniversary of Japan's World War II defeat, Imperial Army veteran Waichi Okumura frowned when he heard of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's visit to Yasukuni Shrine, where Japan's war dead are enshrined.
Like a squadron of ants, he and fellow soldiers fought World War II as they were told, Mr. Okumura said. But he refuses to worship at the Tokyo shrine, which also honors 14 officials convicted by a postwar Allied tribunal as Class-A war criminals.
"Those who fought in the war of aggression and died are not gods," he said in a recent documentary about the war.
"The Ants" ["Ari no Heitai"], the story about Mr. Okumura and fellow soldiers left in China after the war, attempts to prevent war memories from fading into oblivion. The film came as many politicians, scholars and journalists shrug off memories of the war and as Mr. Koizumi's visit to the shrine aggravates Japan's relations with Asian neighbors and draws criticism from the United States.
The film, directed by Kaoru Ikeya, did not feature celebrities or generate a media blitz as some nationalistic war movies have, but it played to packed theaters in Tokyo, Nagoya and Osaka, causing managers to increase the number of showings.
In hopes of saving some of Japan's military might, 2,600 of the 59,000 soldiers in Mr. Okumura's division were ordered to remain in Shanxi province after the war ended. They joined the Chinese nationalist army of Gen. Chiang Kai-shek, fighting the communist army led by Mao Zedong. The movie suggests that Japan violated the Allied 1945 Potsdam Declaration, which called for Japan's unconditional surrender and the complete disarmament of its military.
The film is significant because Mr. Okumura is one of the few former soldiers willing to speak out about Japan's wartime atrocities. Many are reluctant to do so, and some glorify the war. A sense of guilt kept Mr. Okumura from discussing the war with his wife before he and the film crew traveled to China last year, he said.
During the Chinese civil war, 550 of the remaining Japanese soldiers died and 700, including Mr. Okumura, were taken prisoner by the communists. Mr. Okumura came under mortar attack in battle, was injured and lost all his teeth and the hearing in his left ear. Meanwhile, the Japanese commander, Gen. Raishiro Sumita, left his men behind and returned home.
In the film, testimony from survivors on both sides reveals a secret agreement between Gen. Sumita and nationalist Gen. Yan Xishan. The latter asked Gen. Sumita to leave Japanese troops in China to help fight Mao, according to the film and earlier studies, and is said to have promised to protect the Japanese commander, accused of war crimes.
Coming home nine years after World War II, Mr. Okumura was appalled to learn that the Japanese troops in China had been discharged from the military while fighting there and denied military pensions. Officially, they were regarded as "volunteers" in the Chinese nationalist army.
Mr. Okumura and others waged a legal battle against the Japanese government to show that the military had kept them in China. Despite the evidence he provided, the Supreme Court rejected the plaintiffs' final appeal in September.
"They completely ignored it," Mr. Okumura said. "Otherwise, they would have had to admit Japan's breach of the Potsdam Declaration." Mr. Okumura and the film crew traveled to China and covered more than 2,000 miles in 22 days. He managed to cross mountainous areas leaning on his stick.
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