...On Aug. 12, Yoshihisa Komori, a Washington-based editorialist for the ultra-conservative Sankei Shimbun newspaper, attacked an article by Masaru Tamamoto, the editor of Commentary, an online journal run by the Japan Institute of International Affairs. The article expressed concern about the emergence of Japan's strident new "hawkish nationalism," exemplified by anti-China fear-mongering and official visits to a shrine honoring Japan's war dead. Komori branded the piece "anti-Japanese," and assailed the mainstream author as an "extreme leftist intellectual." But he didn't stop there. Komori demanded that the institute's president, Yukio Satoh, apologize for using taxpayer money to support a writer who dared to question Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's annual visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, in defiance of Chinese protests that it honors war criminals from World War II. Remarkably, Satoh complied. Within 24 hours, he had shut down Commentary and withdrawn all of the past content on the site...Satoh also sent a letter last week to the Sankei editorial board asking for forgiveness and promising a complete overhaul of Commentary's editorial management...more...
This capitulation does seem surprising but the writer's broader point that such intimidation is "working" seems to miss the point that Yasukuni is being more openly discussed and papers and the Asahi and Yomiuri are both writing critically on the subject.