Series of carefully planned provocations hurting Korean people¡¯s past wounds made during the World War II are letting Korean people suspect the fellow US-ally nation in the region. Japanese leaders seem to be unconcerned with the complication and the toxication created by themselves in the East Asian region. Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe¡¯s visit to the deeply controversial Yasukuni shrine, honoring not only Japanese veterans but also 14 ¡°Class A¡± war criminals, Japanese officials¡¯ frequent denial of the apparent war crimes like the Nanjing massacre, and repeated efforts to repaint the facts like the imperial army¡¯s exploit women from various eastern Asian countries as their sex slaves, all of these ongoing and seemingly endless humiliations only make Korean people raise a question if Japan is really a responsible democratic modern neighbor country. There might be many factors that drive Japan into this ultranationalism such as China¡¯s aggressive expansionism and recently asserted China¡¯s air-defense identification zone including some disputed islands. However, normalizing their country out of the World War II country ¡°by using¡± and even ¡°by creating¡± conflicts with neighboring nations will fundamentally deteriorate the stability in the region. There are many ¡°smart¡± alternatives to achieve their goal. Moreover, inflaming wounded sensitivities of neighboring nations never helps Japan achieve the goal. Japan¡¯s normalization will be only accepted after they sincerely prove their responsibility as German did. All the Japan does now prompts conflicts in the region, as they planned. Japanese leader¡¯s recent ultranationalistic actions may look less dangerous than China¡¯s adventurism from the US perspective, but Japan¡¯s implementation of the hate and disbelief will eventually erode the sustainable peace in the region, against US¡¯s interest. Probably, there will be no war in the near future but there may be sizable conflicts triggered by the deterioration in the region.
Korea needs to improve its fundamentals. As a university professor, I consider that one of most important fundamental aspects needed to be improved in Korea is a higher education system, which is even far behind the OECD standard. Universities, particularly national flagship universities, should be fully funded and supported to have their competitive edges over Japanese universities.