A Warning from History
Don't expect democracy in IraqI
Starting last fall, we began to hear that U.S. policymakers were looking into Japan and Germany after World War II as examples or even models of successful military occupations. In the case of Japan, the imagined analogy with Iraq is probably irresistible. Although Japan was nominally occupied by the victorious Allied powers from August 1945 until early 1952, the Americans ran the show and tolerated no disagreement. This was Unilateralism with a capital Umuch as we are seeing in U.S. global policy in general today. And the occupation was a pronounced success. A repressive society became democratic, and Japanlike Germanyhas posed no military threat for over half a century.
The problem is that few if any of the ingredients that made this success possible are presentor would be presentin the case of Iraq. The lessons we can draw from the occupation of Japan all become warnings where Iraq is concerned.
It is difficult for most people today to imagine what the situation was like in 1945, in the wake of the Second World War. One must remember that Japan had been engaged in aggression in Asia since 1931, when Imperial Army militarists launched a successful takeover of Manchuria. Open war against China began in 1937, and the great and foolhardy preemptive strike against Pearl Harbor took place in December 1941in the context of a Japanese declaration of war against the United States and European powers with colonies in Southeast Asia. Japans aggression was as open and audacious as that of its Axis allies Germany and Italy.
Just as is the case with Europe and the Soviet Union, we will never have an exact reckoning of the death toll of the war in Asia. China bore the brunt of Japanese aggression. Estimates vary and have tended to become inflated in recent years, but the number of Chinese who died directly or indirectly as a consequence of the war is probably in the neighborhood of fifteen million. In countries like the Dutch East Indiesknown today as Indonesiaestimates of fatalities range from one million to several million. In their final frenzy in the Philippines the emperors men massacred around one hundred thousand civilians in Manila alone. U.S. battle deaths in the Pacific War also were approximately one hundred thousand. Japans own war dead numbered around two million servicemen and another one million civiliansroughly four percent of the total population at the time.
This was a charnel house in which the Japanese not only savaged others but were themselves savaged by war and militarism and their own repressive leaders. So, the dream that everyone embraced once Japan had been defeated was of a nation that would never again bring such havoc on its neighbors or, indeed, on its own people. Demilitarization became the watchword of the time, and it was argued that this could only be enduring if the country was democratized as well, so that irresponsible leaders could not repeat these horrors.
When I say that everyone embraced this vision of a demilitarized, democratized Japan, I have in mind not merely the victorious Allied nations but also the Asian peoples who had been so grievously victimized by the Japanese war machinemany of whom remained at wars end colonial subjects of the British, French, Dutch, and Americans. I also have in mind the great majority of the Japanese, who found themselves not only bereaved but also living in a country utterly devastated by a miserable, losing war. Even people who are familiar with the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that preceded Japans surrender in August 1945 often are unaware that the U.S. terror-bombing raids that came before themaimed primarily at destroying civilian moralehad pulverized large portions of 64 other major cities. Tokyo, for example, had been mostly reduced to rubble.
It is important to keep all this in mind when we begin to talk
about drawing lessons from Japan that might be applicable to Iraq
after any projected U.S. hostilities. The postwar occupation of
Japan possessed a great intangible quality that simply will not
be present in the event of a U.S. war against Iraq. It
enjoyed virtually unquestioned legitimacymoral as
well as legal in the eyes of not merely the victors but
all of Japans Asian neighbors and most Japanese themselves.
Japan had been at war for almost fifteen years. It had declared
war on the Allied powers in 1941. It had accepted the somewhat
vague terms of surrender unconditionally less than
four years later. Quite the opposite can be anticipated if the
United States attacks and then occupies Iraq. The United States
will find the legitimacy of its actions widely challengedwithin
Iraq, throughout the Middle East and much of the rest of the world,
and even among many of its erstwhile supporters and allies.
II
What made the occupation of Japan a success was two years or so of genuine reformist idealism before U.S. policy became consumed by the Cold War, coupled with a real Japanese embrace of the opportunity to start over. There are moments in historyfleeting occasions of opportunitywhen people actually sit down and ask, What is a good society? How can we bring this about? Winners in war do not ask this of themselves. Winners tend to say we won, were good, were righteous, what we did was just, now its time to get back to business and build on our strengths. But loserscertainly in the case of Japanare under more compulsion to ask what went wrong and what they might do to make sure they dont fall into the same disasters again.
American policy toward defeated Japan meshed with this Japanese sense of failure and the necessity of starting over. The Americans may not have been self-critical, but they had definite ideas about what needed to be done to make Japan democratic. Much of this thinking came from liberals and leftists who had been associated with Franklin D. Roosevelts progressive New Deal policiespolicies that were already falling out of favor in Washington before the war ended. One might say that the last great exercise of New Deal idealism was carried out by Americans in defeated Japan. It was this combination of the Americans using their unconditional authority to crack open the old authoritarian system and Japanese at all levels seizing this opportunity to make the reforms work that accounts for the success of the occupation.
The reforms that were introduced in the opening year and a half or so of the occupation were quite stunning. They amounted to a sweeping commitment to what we now call nation-buildingthe sort of hands-on commitment that George W. Bush explicitly repudiated in his presidential campaign. The Americans introduced in Japan a major land reform, for example, that essentially took land from rich landlords, eliminated widespread tenancy, and created a class of small rural landowners. The argument for this was that rural oppression had kept the countryside poor, thwarted democracy, constricted the domestic market, and fueled the drive to control overseas markets. We introduced labor laws that guaranteed the right to organize, bargain collectively, and strike, on the grounds that a viable labor movement is essential to any viable democracy. We encouraged the passage of a strong labor standards law to prevent exploitation of workers including women and children. We revamped both the content and structure of the educational system. In all this the input of Japanese bureaucrats and technocrats was essential to implement such reforms, and serious grass-roots support was basic to their survival.
One of our major initiatives was to create an entirely new constitution. There were no citizens in Japan in 1945. There was no popular sovereignty. Under the existing constitution, sovereignty was vested in the emperor and all Japanese were his subjects. So, the Americans draftedbut the Japanese translated, debated, tinkered with, and adopteda new national charter that remains one of the most progressive constitutions in the world. The emperor became a symbol of the state. An extensive range of human and civil rights was guaranteedincluding an explicit guarantee of gender equality. Belligerency of the state was repudiated. Changing the constitution meant, moreover, that much of the civil code had to be rewritten to conform to these new strictures concerning equality and guaranteed rights. Although the occupation ended in 1952 and there are no restrictions on amending the constitution, not a word of it has been changed.
There will be revisions in the near future, I would predict, primarily to clarify the legal status of Japans present-day military forces. But it is inconceivable that they will undo the principles of popular sovereignty and extensive guarantee of democracy rights. And, in one way or another, whatever revision takes place, we should expect to see reaffirmation of the fundamental ideals of antimilitarism.
I have no doubt that huge numbers of Iraqis would welcome the
end of repression and establishment of a democratic society, but
any number of considerations make the situation there very different
than it was in Japan. Apart from lacking the moral legitimacy
and internal and global support that buttressed its occupation
of Japan, the United States is not in the business of nation-building
any morejust look at Afghanistan. And we certainly are not
in the business of promoting radical democratic reform. Even liberal
ideals are anathema in the conservative circles that shape U.S.
policy today. And beyond this, many of the conditions that contributed
to the success of the occupation of Japan are simply absent in
Iraq.
III
John Stuart Mill has a wonderful line somewhere to the effect that a country can be laid waste by fire and sword, but in and of itself this really doesnt matter where recovery is concerned. What matters is not so much what is destroyed but rather what human resources survive. Even though Japan had been laid to ruin by the terror-bombing of its cities, what survived was an exceptionally literate populace whose long war effort had, in fact, contributed to great and widespread advances in technological and technocratic skills. At the same time this was an essentially homogeneous populace that had been mobilized behind a common national cause.
The failure and discredit of the cause did not destroy this general sense of collective national purpose. It meant, however, that these great human resources were available to be mobilized to new ends that were more peaceful and progressive. Put simply, one of the reasons the reformist agenda succeeded is that Japan was spared the type of fierce tribal, religious, and political factionalism that exists in countries like Iraq today.
Particularly in the early stages of effecting a smooth surrender Japan also possessed an unusually flexiblesome would say chameleonlikeleader in the person of Emperor Hirohito. The emperor had certainly been the symbol of presurrender militarism, and no innocent bystander to wartime policymaking. He was not, however, a hands-on dictator akin to Hitler or Mussolinior to Saddam Hussein. Once surrender became unavoidable the emperor adroitly metamorphosed into a symbol of cooperation with the conquerors. He came quietly, and for reasons of pure expediency the Americans happily whitewashed and welcomed him. He became, as it were, a beacon of continuity in the midst of drastic change. We cannot, of course, imagine anything of the sort taking place in a post-hostilities Iraq.
Much the same sort of continuity took place at the levels of both national and local government. Certain important reforms were introduced at the national levelmost notably the abolition of the War (army) and Navy ministries and the breakup and gutting of the once-powerful Home Ministry, which had controlled the police and dictated policies at the level of the prefectures or states. But for all practical purposes the bureaucracy remained intact, top to bottom. And to a far greater extent than anyone really anticipated, bureaucrats and civil servants cooperated in implementing the early reformist agendas. Democratization of the structure and content of the educational system, to take but one example, required and received enormous input from bureaucrats and teachers at every level. The skills and education levels of the Iraqi people are substantial, but it is nonetheless difficult to imagine a comparably swift, smooth, and substantial redirection of existing administrative and institutional structures in a post-hostilities Iraq.
We should also keep in mind what defeated Japan did not
possess. Japan is notoriously poor in natural resources. A desperate
quest for control of raw materials as well as markets was one
of the major considerations that drove Japanese imperialism and
aggression in the first place. That, after all, is why the emperors
men deemed it necessary to invade Southeast Asia andonce
that decision had been madeattempted to forestall American
retaliation by launching a preemptive strike at the U.S. fleet
at Pearl Harbor. In the wake of Japans shattering defeat,
no one ever imagined that it would ever again become a major power;
and there were no resources within Japan itself to covet. And
so the reformersAmericans and Japanese alikehad a
brief breathing space in which to push their ambitious agendas
without being hammered by special economic interests. Iraq, of
course, with its great oil resources, will not be spared such
interference.
IV
The occupation of Japan offers no model whatsoever for any projected occupation of Iraq. On the contrary, it should stand as a warning that we are lurching toward war with no idea of what we are really getting into. What is presented as hard-nosed realism by the advocates of a preemptive strike against Iraq is reallywhat? I have concluded after much thought that our so-called realism is simply a terrible hubris.
But to an historian of the United States and Japan and World War II there are also terrible ironies in these recent developments. Part of the irony is that Americanscertainly Americans in the current administrationhave no sense of irony. September 11 has become our terrible new Pearl Harbor, and at the very same time we are touting preemptive strikes as a moral and practical modus operandi. In the name of curbing weapons of mass destruction we have embarked on a massive program of producing new arsenals of mass destruction and have announced that we may resort to first-use of nuclear weapons. We express moral repulsion and horror at the terror-bombing of civilians, and rightly so; and then an endless stream of politicians and pundits explains how this is peculiar to Islamic fundamentalists who do not value human life as we do. But terror-bombing has been everyones game since World War II. This is the term historians routinely use to describe the U.S. bombing campaign against Japan that began with the destruction, in a single air raid, of fourteen square miles of downtown Tokyo in March 1945 and continued through Hiroshima and Nagasaki. There is nothing cultural or religious or unique about this.
There is one lesson from my own field of Japanese history that I find increasingly difficult to put out of mind these days, and that concerns the road to war that began in the early 1930s for Japan and only ended in 1945. Until recently, historians used to explain this disaster in terms of Japans backwardness and semifeudal nature. The country had all these old warrior traditions. It wasnt a democracyand, of course, democracies dont wage aggressive war. More recent studies, however, cast Japans road to war in a different and more terrifying light.
Why terrifying? First, much recent scholarship suggests that it was the modern rather than backward aspects of Japanese society and culture that enabled a hawkish leadership to mobilize the country for all-out war. Modern mass communications enabled politicians and ideologues to whip up war sentiment and castigate those who criticized the move to war as traitors. Modern concerns about external markets and resources drove Japan into Manchuria, China, and Southeast Asia. Modern weaponry carried its own technological imperatives. Top-level planners advanced up-to-date theories about mobilizing the entire resources of the country (and surrounding areas) for total war. Sophisticated phrasemakers pumped out propaganda about defending the homeland and promoting coexistence and co-prosperity throughout Asia. Cultures of violence, cultures of militarism, cultures of unquestioning obedience to supreme authority in the face of national crisisall of this was nurtured by sophisticated organs of propaganda and control. And, in retrospect, none of this seems peculiarly dated or peculiarly Japanese today.
The other aspect that is so terrifying to contemplate is that virtually every step of the way, the Japanese leaders who concluded that military solutions had become unavoidable were very smart and very proud of their technical expertise, their special knowledge, their unsentimental realism in a threatening world. Many of these planners were, in our own phrase, the best and the brightest. We have detailed records of their deliberations and planning papers, and most are couched in highly rational terms. Each new escalation, each new extension of the empire, was deemed essential to the national interest. And even in retrospect, it is difficult to say at what point this so-called realism crossed the border into madness. But it was, in the end, madness.
About the Author
John W. Dower is Elting E. Morison Professor of History at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His recent book, Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War II,
won numerous awards including the Pulitzer Prize, the National
Book Award, and the Bancroft Prize.
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