Asian Monroeism

Asian Monroeism (アジア・モンロー主義) or Far Eastern Monroeism (極東モンロー主義) is a form of Pan-Asianism. It refers to the ideology of establishing an exclusive hegemony (autarkic sphere) in Asia, similar to the Monroe Doctrine, to ensure the independence of the Empire of Japan. It served as the foundation for the New Order in East Asia and the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. It is also known as the Oriental Monroe Doctrine, East Asian Monroe Doctrine,[1] Far Eastern Monroe Doctrine, or Japanese Monroe Doctrine.

It is said to have originated in November 1898, when Konoe Atsumaro proposed the Monroe Doctrine of Asia (亜細亜のモンロー主義). After the Racial Equality Proposal was rejected at the Paris Peace Conference following World War I, and the Immigration Act of 1924 was passed by the U.S. Congress, the idea that "Japan should deal with Britain and the United States through an Asian alliance" gained momentum within Japan. On November 28, 1924, Sun Yat-sen delivered his lecture on "Greater Asianism" in Kobe, leading to new developments. Sympathy for Indians under British oppression, subsequent international isolation, and economic pressure from the trade blocs of Western powers fostered Great Pan-Asian thought in Japan. This overlapped with Pan-Asianism and the Nanshin-ron (Southern Expansion Doctrine) since the Meiji era, leading to the birth of "Asian Monroeism," which was also used to justify the construction of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.[2]

Following the Mukden Incident, it saw significant development as a logic to counter the Washington System. In April 1934, an informal statement by Amau Eiji, then-Director of the Information Bureau of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (the 'Amau Statement'), was regarded by Western powers as a "Declaration of an Asian Monroe Doctrine" (アジア・モンロー主義宣言) and was condemned. Subsequently, during the pre-war Shōwa era, Asian Monroeism became the ideology justifying the expansionism and imperialism of the Empire of Japan in the Asian region.

See also

References

  1. ^ 藤本博生 (November 1976). "<論説>パリ講和会議と日本・中国 : 「人種案」と日使恫喝事件". 史林. 59 (6). 史学研究会 (京都大学文学部内): 902–929. doi:10.14989/shirin_59_902. ISSN 0386-9369.
  2. ^ 中嶋啓雄 (March 2015). "モンロー・ドクトリン,アジア・モンロー主義と日米の国際秩序観――戦前・戦中期における日本のモンロー・ドクトリン論を手掛かりに――". アメリカ研究. 49. アメリカ学会: 61–80. doi:10.11380/americanreview.49.0_61. ISSN 0387-2815.

Further reading

  • Keiichi Eguchi History of Research on the Fifteen Years' War (十五年戦争研究史論), Akakura Shobō, 2001, ISBN 4751731904
  • Toshikazu Inoue Rethinking Pan-Asianism (アジア主義を問いなおす), Chikuma Shobō, 2006, ISBN 4480063188