Vow to recover missing war dead of Iwo Jima revives painful memories in Japan

JAPANESE PRIME minister Naoto Kan has vowed to bring closure to one of the second World War’s most notorious and iconic episodes…

JAPANESE PRIME minister Naoto Kan has vowed to bring closure to one of the second World War’s most notorious and iconic episodes, largely forgotten in his country until a Hollywood superstar took an interest.

Clint Eastwood’s acclaimed 2006 movies Flags of Our Fathers and Letters from Iwo Jima brought the battle for a strategic speck of volcanic rock in the Pacific Ocean juddering back into Japan’s public consciousness and spurred the search for 12,000 missing troops. Yesterday Mr Kan promised to bring them home.

“There remain many fallen soldiers,” he said at a Tokyo memorial service to inter over 800 remains from the island. “We vow to find them as soon as possible. It is the government’s responsibility to search thoroughly for the remains.” The speech follows his trip last December to Iwo Jima – now known as Iwo To – about 1,120km (700 miles) south of Tokyo, when he pledged to “examine every grain of sand” for men still missing in action.

The eight-square-mile island, a third the size of Manhattan, was blasted almost flat, becoming what one veteran called a “sulphurous, crater-filled hellhole” in six weeks of bloody fighting in February and March of 1945. When the fighting stopped, nearly 7,000 mostly US soldiers were dead, and just 200 of the 21,800 Japanese troops defending the island, many dug into foxholes and caves, had been taken alive.

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The black sands of Iwo Jima passed into military legend, immortalised in a famous photograph by Joe Rosenthal showing exhausted marines raising the Stars and Stripes on Mount Suribachi on February 23rd, 1945. The battle remains, even after 60 years of blood-soaked history in Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq, the US marines’ deadliest: nearly one-third of all marines killed in the second World War died on the island. It holds the record for the number of US medals of honour awarded in a single campaign.

But in Japan, which lost the war five months later, the remote island and the story of what happened there largely faded from view. Mr Kan was only the second Japanese leader to visit after Junichiro Koizumi went in 2005. Mr Koizumi’s trip was seen as evidence Japan is slowly overcoming its war amnesia, prodded by a new generation of nationalist politicians keen to highlight Japanese heroism – and play down war crimes.

Eastwood’s double-header, which explored the battle from both sides, sparked a revival of interest and the setting-up of a project by the prime minister to recover the Japanese dead. Last year, the project received a shot in the arm with the discovery of two mass graves, including one at the foot of Mount Suribachi. The find of about 2,000 remains was one of the biggest since sporadic digging began in the 1950s.

Until recently, open admiration for the war dead was mainly the preserve of the political right in Japan. The very public commitment of Mr Kan, leader of the left-leaning Democratic party, is a sign that the political consensus on the war is shifting. He gave his speech at the Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery, a secular memorial for unidentified war dead, rather than the more emotive and controversial Yasukuni Shrine. Most of the bodies, badly decomposed, will be buried there.

Mr Kan said the search for bodies on Iwo To was part of the fight to preserve war memories. “We will continue conveying to younger generations this tragic history, which should not fade into oblivion.”