Op-Ed

The World Needs Article Nine

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

David Rothauser

By David Rothauser

In 1946, the United States government decided that Japan needed a peace constitution. One was written. It included Article Nine which stated that Japan should never make war again.

A majority of citizens in Japan wholeheartedly embraced Article Nine. They had had enough of war following the crushing defeat of World War II.

The ink had barely dried on Japan's new constitution, however, when America found herself embroiled in another war, this time in Korea.

"Drop Article Nine of the Constitution," said Uncle Sam. "Go to war against North Korea."

Not issued in such blatant terms, America's intentions were nevertheless perfectly clear.

In July 1950, General Douglas MacArthur, the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers, issued a secret order for the immediate build-up of a 300,000 to 350,000-man army. Identified as a "National Police Reserve," this "little American army" included artillery, tanks, and aircraft.

Japan went into shock. The Americans were acting irrationally. They had just completed a four-year war against Japan, fire-bombed Japan's largest cities, A-bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, demanded an unconditional surrender - and now wanted Japan to fight for the United States against North Korea.

Japan had barely dug herself out of the rubble of World War II, could barely feed herself, and could hardly treat her radiated victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The physical, psychological and emotional trauma was so huge - and now the Great White Father wanted Japan to tell her people that Article Nine was a mistake? Take up arms against her Asian neighbors who already despised her for the atrocities she committed during the war?

Yet Japan clung tenaciously to her new constitution. The result is that Japan has prospered as one of the world's economic giants and, more importantly, has lived in peace for more than sixty years. Not one Japanese soldier has been lost in war since 1945. Not one civilian has suffered the agonies of war since 1945. This is a legacy to be proud of.

What might have happened if Japan had dropped Article Nine in 1950?

It is not inconceivable that a pattern would have formed, an expectation that Japan would follow America's lead in the crusade to democratize the world - by force if necessary - by the tacit threat of nuclear annihilation, necessary or not.

Is this the Japan of the 21st century? Apparently, former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi thought so. American Neocons certainly think so. Roughly 50% of the Japanese population thinks so.

Conservative Japanese governments wanted to be rid of Article Nine. That might have paved the way for Japan to have a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council. It might have made it possible to develop a military capable of making pre-emptive air strikes, a military that would be respected by many industrialized nations in the world community, but would strike fear into the hearts of her Asian neighbors.

The very constitution that helped establish Japan as a model for peace and prosperity around the world, a model that can project Japan as the number one leader in that sphere, could suddenly cast her in the image of an imperial, self-aggrandizing bully still in the shadow of her American protector, if she drops Article Nine.

Is there an alternative?

There's always an alternative. It comes from imagination and the desire to survive. Japan has lived for more than sixty years under the illusion of American security. That illusion was self-sustaining until the reality of 9.11. America the "protector" was rendered supremely vulnerable by the sudden attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Not only can she no longer protect her friends and allies, she is incapable of protecting her own people. That reality is repeated every day in Iraq and Afghanistan.

But Japan has a real advantage: the Peace Constitution. By embracing it in 1950 and saying, "No" to American coercion, Japan took the first step in becoming a world leader for peace.

Now Japan has a golden opportunity to inspire other nations to embrace the idea of peace as an organizing principle in which non-violence and peace become one and the same; where the dynamics of non-violence and peace become ingrained in every person's daily activities; where the spirit of Wa (harmony) becomes the dominant force in every society.

Japan had the power to say, "No" in 1950; and she now has the power to say "Yes!" to independence from the illusion of American security; to say "Yes!" to the abolition of nuclear weapons; to say "Yes!" to Article Nine and the Peace Constitution.

By so doing, Japan will become a beacon of hope to the world. Her beacon will unite instead of divide.

May we reflect a moment to that time in 1945 when weapons of mass destruction were first introduced into human society. Atomic warfare changed the face of war forever. Today, nations holding nuclear weapons possess the capability of igniting a nuclear holocaust that threatens all life on the planet. Conventional weapons are therefore obsolete.

The enemy is as much the tiger behind the gates as the tiger at the gates.

The threat of nuclear war has been used as an act of psychological terror since Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

But there is a glimmer of hope too.

America, the most powerful nation on earth, has the responsibility to lead by example. Until recently, we lacked the long term vision, imagination, and fortitude to take the initiative to lead by alternative means. Peace was an undefined obstacle to world domination.

For decades, the government of the United States has chipped away at Japan's resolve to maintain Article Nine.

The stakes are much higher now for life on the planet than they were in 1950. Nuclear submarines dock at Japanese ports. Nuclear proliferation is a form of Russian Roulette.

We must demand that US President Barack Obama support the Japanese Peace Constitution as a model for world peace, rather than as a convenient tool for world domination. Sixty plus years of peaceful life in one of the world's most advanced economies is a powerful incentive to pursue a world free from the threat of nuclear annihilation.

In a dramatic reversal from past US administrations, President Obama has expressed a long-term vision for a nuclear free world. Campaigning as a peace candidate opposed to the war in Iraq, Obama is in a position to unite the potential power of Article Nine with the abolition of nuclear weapons.

Obama is a great communicator and has won the hearts and minds of many Americans. Reaching out to citizens, young and old, across the land, he gained their trust and has called upon them to take action on their own behalf.

We must accept that challenge and act upon it. By so doing, it becomes our responsibility to communicate to our political leaders that real change is brought about by unity, not by division, by "reaching across the aisle," not by partisanship.

Our very survival is at stake. It is not Japan alone that needs Article Nine. It is the world.

It is here that Japan may play a major role. By keeping Article Nine, she will have displayed the strength, vision, and courage that America currently lacks. Japan's fortitude will serve as an impetus for America to live up to its own ideals. To lead in this fashion will take immense courage, a unique vision for the future of humankind, and the will to break the chains of war as a means to an end.

The leadership of this great country has a golden opportunity to lead by example. With President Obama's clarity of vision, patient determination, and his ability to unite people of differing persuasions, the gap between war and peace, between nuclear proliferation and nuclear abolition, can begin to close. It is then that the beauty of Article Nine may reach its full fruition.


David Rothauser is a filmmaker and peace activist. His most recent film, "Hibakusha, Our Life to Live," is a documentary about A-bomb survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki


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