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    Japan Marks WWII’s End, Kishida Doesn’t Mention Aggression

    Japan Marks WWII's End, Kishida Doesn't Mention Aggression

    's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida renewed Japan's no-war pledge at a somber ceremony Monday as his country marked the 77th anniversary of its World War II defeat, but he did not mention Japanese wartime aggression.

    In his first address as prime minister since taking office in October, Kishida said Japan will “stick to our resolve to never repeat the tragedy of the war.”

    Kishida did not mention Japanese aggression across in the first half of the 20th century or the victims in the region. The omission was a precedent set by the assassinated former leader Shinzo Abe, who had pushed to whitewash Japan's wartime brutality.

    Kishida largely focused on the damages Japan suffered on its turf — the U.S. atomic bombings on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, massive firebombings across Japan and the bloody ground battle on Okinawa. He said the peace and prosperity that the country enjoys today is built on the suffering and sacrifices of those who died in the war.

    Beginning in 2013, Abe stopped acknowledging Japan's wartime hostilities or apologizing in his Aug. 15 speeches, scrapping the tradition that began in 1995.

    Emperor Naruhito repeated his “deep remorse” over Japan's wartime actions in a nuanced phrase in his speech, like his father, Emperor Emeritus Akihito, who devoted his career to making amends for a war fought in the name of the wartime emperor, Hirohito, the current emperor's grandfather.

    Some 900…

    Continue Reading This Article At Military.com

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