How Asians view each other
The Economist | 18 September 2015
AS WE highlighted in our recent essay,
old resentments die hard in Asia. The latest report by the Pew Research
Centre on public perceptions in countries in the Asia-Pacific region
bears this out. Historic grudges continue to colour the views East
Asians in particular (in China, Japan and South Korea) hold about the
other countries. Seventy years after Japan’s second-world-war surrender
and the end of its occupation of much of China, very few Chinese see
Japan in a favourable light. Correspondingly, as China has been
increasingly assertive in pursuing its territorial dispute with Japan
over the Senkaku or Diaoyu islands, the number of Japanese with positive views of China has fallen to similar levels.
The
end of the second world war also marked the end of Japanese colonial
rule in Korea. Many South Koreans, like many Chinese still believe that
Japan has not apologised enough for its militaristic, colonial past.
Today just 25% of South Koreans view Japan favourably. Elsewhere,
however, although many other parts of Asia suffered Japanese aggression,
much of the region holds a generally positive image of Japan. In
Malaysia for example, also occupied by Japan during the war, 84% of
those surveyed view Japan kindly. So too in South Asia, both Indians and
Pakistanis hold favourable views of Japan (and reserve their deepest
resentments for each other).
China meanwhile remains very popular
with its “all-weather friend” Pakistan. And overall, a majority of those
surveyed (57%) held favourable views of the biggest power in the
region. But some countries, particularly those bordering the South China
Sea, feel much more wary. They are alarmed by China’s frenzied construction activity
in the sea, turning rocks and reefs into artificial islands that could
have military uses. When asked about China’s overlapping territorial
claims, the vast majority of people in the Philippines and Vietnam—where
the disputes are most active are “very or somewhat concerned”. A
majority of Indians, Japanese and South Koreans—all with their own
territorial disagreements with China—are also worried.
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