Shinzo Abe's legacy skips from continent to continent. The former Japanese statesman who was assassinated at a rally in the city of Nara while campaigning for elections to Japan’s upper house on 8th July was a very consequential leader who left an indelible mark not just in Japan, but across the globe.
His legacy—while not without controversy—includes a broad range of accomplishments, from laying the foundation of Quad to reinvigorating its diplomacy to making Japan a more open and accessible country.
During his tenure as Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe made a bold stand to move Japan closer to the ideal many once assumed it would embrace, to battle for political leadership in Asia. Abe did so by scrapping some of the restrictions on military cooperation and activities abroad, increasing the country’s military budget, and deepening the alliance with the United States of America. Even more boldly, he moved to provide defence equipment to Southeast Asian nations, enhanced ties with India and its Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and increased Japan’s presence in the South China Sea, besides unveiling the defence cooperation initiative with ASEAN.
An early sketch of Abe’s vision emerged in a speech in 2007 in India, during his first stint as prime minister of Japan. He called for a “broader Asia” spanning not only the Pacific but the Indian Ocean as well—“seas of freedom and prosperity, which will be open and transparent to all.” Abe placed New Delhi at the heart of Japan’s strategy for Asia and the Indo-Pacific. New Delhi and Tokyo upgraded the status of their bilateral partnership and articulated a joint vision for the future of the region. Japan’s robust investments in India as well as its willingness to take up infrastructure projects in the sensitive Northeast served to deepen ties. In fact, The Government of India conferred the Padma Vibhushan award on Abe in 2021, accepting his large contribution to the development of bilateral relations.