The Economist - Issues August 2022

Page 31

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Asia

The Economist July 9th 2022

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32 Afghan theocracy and bureaucracy

33 State politics in India

33 Female employment in Bangladesh

34 Banyan: Japan’s new isolationism

East Asian relations

Cold comfort

SEOUL AND TO KYO

History divides South Korea and Japan. They have a rare chance to make up

T

he flight time between Seoul and To­ kyo is just under two hours. Yet the last time a leader of South Korea or Japan paid a state visit to the other was in 2011, when Lee Myung­bak, then South Korea’s president, went to see Noda Yoshihiko, Japan’s prime minister at the time. Mr Lee praised Mr No­ da’s recent goodwill gesture of returning some 1,205 royal books, which Japan had fi lched from South Korea during colonial times. Mr Noda held an intimate dinner party in Kyoto in honour of Mr Lee’s 70th birthday and 41st wedding anniversary. The two leaders expressed their desire to build a “future­oriented relationship” be­ tween their countries. Along with China, Japan and South Ko­ rea are East Asia’s economic powerhouses. Unlike their giant neighbour, they are es­ tablished democracies and staunch allies of America. They are also wary of China’s growing clout in the region, to say nothing of the threat from a bellicose North Korea. But despite their shared contemporary in­ terests, the past divides them. During the

same summit, Mr Lee and Mr Noda clashed over the issue of “comfort women”, as Ko­ reans and others forced into brothels for the benefi t of Japanese soldiers during the second world war were euphemistically called (a memorial to the women is pic­ tured). The goodwill quickly turned to re­ newed bad faith. A mix of historical griev­ ances and fresh disputes has continued to curdle relations for a decade. The problems stem from divergent memories about Japan’s colonisation of Korea between 1910 and 1945 and the suff er­ ing it infl icted on Koreans. It looked for a brief moment in 2015 as if the two might begin to put the past behind them. That year, Japan’s Abe Shinzo and South Korea’s Park Geun­hye, the countries’ leaders at the time, agreed a “fi nal and irreversible” deal on the matter of comfort women. Mr Abe issued an offi cial apology. His govern­ ment gave ¥1bn ($7.4m) to a foundation to compensate victims. Ms Park’s successor, Moon Jae­in, was critical of the deal from its inception. In

2018, a year after he was elected, he ordered the foundation to dissolve. That year the country’s Supreme Court twice upheld rul­ ings ordering Japanese fi rms to compen­ sate South Koreans forced to work in their factories to aid the Japanese war eff ort. Ja­ pan, which considers such claims settled through a treaty signed in 1965, was aghast. The ruling created a formal legal barrier to rapprochement. But attitudes on both sides hardened too. A window of opportunity to improve re­ lations may now be opening, if only briefl y. Mr Moon fi nished his term in May. His suc­ cessor, Yoon Suk­yeol, has renewed the call for “future­oriented” ties with Japan. Kishida Fumio, Japan’s prime minister, faces upper­house elections on July 10th, which his Liberal Democratic Party (ldp) is on course to win. He will then have up to three years before the next national vote. Both leaders have stressed the importance of working together amid an ever more challenging regional environment. Since Mr Yoon took offi ce, links be­ tween the countries have begun to revive. He signalled his intent to patch things up by sending a delegation to Tokyo in April. On June 29th American, Japanese and South Korean leaders met to discuss secu­ rity on the sidelines of a nato summit for the fi rst time in nearly fi ve years. On July 4th the two countries’ big business associ­ ations held their fi rst meeting in three years. They urged their political leaders to

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