Every year around this time, in the run-up to the Aug. 15 anniversary of Japan's surrender in 1945, feverish speculation ensues about whether Japan's top politicians will visit Yasukuni Shrine in central Tokyo. Chinese and South Koreans — not to mention many Japanese — abhor such visits because the shrine honors the souls of 14 "Class A" war criminals. Visitors say they have every right to honor the 2.5 million other Japanese war dead celebrated at Yasukuni; they compare the shrine to the U.S. war cemetery at Arlington.
This is dangerous nonsense. Yasukuni is ground zero for an unrepentant view of Japan's wartime aggression.
During World War II, the shrine served as the "command headquarters" of State Shinto, a religion that deified the emperor and mobilized Japanese subjects to fight a holy war at his behest. The private foundation that runs Yasukuni added the 14 most controversial "souls" — surreptitiously — in 1978.
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