A bug’s life
Tales from the Ant World.
By Edward
Wilson.
Liveright; 240 pages; $26.95
and £17.99
Anty matter
A
be shinzo
was just five years old in
1960 when protesters surrounded his
grandfather’s house in Tokyo. Kishi Nobu-
suke, then Japan’s prime minister, was in
the midst of a pitched battle over Japan’s
security treaty with America. Kishi would
get his treaty that year, though it led to him
losing power. For a young Mr Abe, the epi-
sode would be “the touchstone of his polit-
ical identity”, argues Tobias Harris in “The
Iconoclast”, a new biography of Japan’s lon-
gest-serving prime minister.
Mr Abe’s status as the grandson of a for-
mer prime minister and the son of a former
foreign minister, Abe Shintaro, is well-
known. Mr Harris, a longtime observer of
Japanese politics, astutely explains how Mr
Abe’s family influenced his thinking, and
situates that thinking in the broader con-
text of Japanese history stretching back to
the Meiji restoration of 1868. This compre-
hensive and engaging tome may become
the definitive English-language portrait of
Mr Abe, made all the more relevant by his
recent resignation (see Asia section).
As Mr Harris shows, Mr Abe is the pro-
geny of Kishi, but a product of the Ameri-
can occupation and the many strange com-
promises it engendered. His grandfather’s
fate is one of the most striking. Kishi made
his name orchestrating forced labour for
the Japanese war machine as a minister in
Japanese-occupied Manchuria in the 1930s.
He served loyally in Japan’s wartime cabi-
net and was arrested as a war criminal in
1945. As the cold war ramped up, Kishi was
one of several ex-leaders the Americans let
off in order to help rebuild Japan as a bul-
wark against Soviet communism. Kishi
climbed to the pinnacle of power in Japan
by helping to found the Liberal Democratic
Party (
ldp
) with a bit of help from the
cia
.
Re-establishing Japan’s sovereignty and
seeking greater equality in the partnership
with America became Kishi’s mission. But
in the battle of post-war ideas, his vision
lost out to the “Yoshida Doctrine” (so
named after Japan’s first significant post-
war prime minister, Yoshida Shigeru),
wherein Japan would rely upon America
for security while focusing on its own eco-
nomic development. Mr Abe made it his
cause to revise that consensus, embodied
in the American-imposed post-war consti-
tution that bars Japan from having armed
forces (though it does, with American sup-
port, maintain mighty armed forces for the
Abe Shinzo
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