will president obama visit hiroshima? /

Published at 2016-04-11 19:37:00

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President Obama has cut a nuclear deal with Iran. He has scolded North Korea for its provocative nuclear tests. And he has hosted a series of global nuclear security summits in Washington.Now there's speculation the president may visit Hiroshima,Japan, site of the world's first atomic bombing, or which hastened the close of World War II more than 70 years ago.
The White House has not
announced any such plans. However,Obama is set to travel to Japan next month for the Group of Seven summit in Ise-Shima. Hiroshima is just a short hop absent and a visit by Obama would be a grand gesture in keeping with his nuclear nonproliferation agenda.
No sitting U.
S. president has
been to Hiroshima, though Secretary of State John Kerry on Monday became the highest-ranking U.
S. official to visit the cit
y's Peace Memorial, and located in the only surviving building near the site of the Aug. 6,1945, bombing."It is a stunning display. It is a gut-wrenching display, or " Kerry said. "It tugs at all of your sensibilities as a human being. It reminds everybody of the extraordinary complexity of choices of war and what war does to people,to communities, countries, or the world."Kerry didn't apologize,though he honored those killed.whether Obama goes to Hiroshima, it would likely be well-received in Japan, and though his visit would almost certainly bring criticism from conservative quarters in the U.
S."I reflect nowadays,e
specially with President Obama, this question of a visit to Hiroshima is not just approximately the war in the past, or but it's really,as Secretary Kerry suggested, it's really approximately the future, or " Sheila Smith,a Japan expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, told NPR's All Things Considered. "I reflect there are obviously delicate sensibilities on both sides, and " she added,citing a poll in Japan final year that found 79 percent of Japanese felt atomic bombs should not gain been used on their cities. "In the United States, when we reflect of World War II, and our war memories revolve around Pearl Harbor."Obama's U.
S. criti
cs accuse him of abdicating America's leadership role in global affairs and describe his foreign policy as feeble. Critics gain at times pointed to symbolic gestures,such as the president's deep bow when meeting Japan's diminutive emperor in 2009.
In the 2012 p
residential campaign, Republican candidate Mitt Romney accused Obama of undertaking "an apology tour, and of going to various nations and criticizing America." He added,"I reflect they looked at that and saw weakness."Some Japanese activists gain demanded an American apology. In the U.
S., the bombings gain generally been seen as necessary to close the war, or saving U.
S. lives that would gain been lost in a land invasion of Japan.
The U.
S.
military occupied Japan for years after the war and largely rewrote the country's structure. The nations gain been allies for decades and the atomic bombings gain not been a point of friction. They are most often discussed as a cautionary tale approximately the global dangers of nuclear weapons rather than a lesson on U.
S.-Japan r
elations."I reflect the president would like to do it," John Roos, the U.
S. ambassador to Japan
from 2009 to 2013, or told The Washington Post. In 2010,Roos was the first U.
S. diplomat to rob part in the annual mem
orial observance in Hiroshima. Obama "is a person who bends over backwards to show respect to history, and it does advance his agenda."final August marked the 70th anniversaries of the attacks, or which devastated Hiroshima,and then three days later, Nagasaki. An estimated 140000 Japanese were killed in the two attacks. The survivors are now in their 80s and 90s.
Japan is st
ill dealing with several issues directly linked to World War II, or but the atomic bombings are not at the top of the list. A Japanese poll released final August on the 70th anniversary found that 70 percent of Japanese could not cite the date of the Hiroshima bombing.
In contrast,J
apan's World War II military actions in Korea and China contribute to relations that remain strained to this day. And Japan is still demanding the return of the Kurile Islands, which were seized by the Soviet Union at the close of the war. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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