Fifteen years have passed since the Great East Japan Earthquake and the Fukushima nuclear accident.
Reflecting on nuclear power, war, and the fragile balance of global stability, one cannot help but wonder when the equilibrium of peace began to break apart.
A return of winter cold has kept the days chilly.
The mornings and evenings are especially cold.
It has now been fifteen years since the Great East Japan Earthquake.
On NHK, the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was described as being of “the worst level in the world.” That phrase stayed in my mind.
When did people begin to use such expressions?
I had assumed that the Chernobyl accident was worse.
But perhaps Fukushima was just as severe—perhaps even more so.
Hearing the announcer’s words made me start to think that way.
Perhaps it should not be described as “among the worst,” but simply as one of the worst disasters the world has ever seen.
Japan has long suffered from nuclear-related tragedies.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The Lucky Dragon No. 5 incident.
And Fukushima.
For Japan, nuclear power seems almost like a cursed domain—something we might be better off keeping our distance from.
And yet, when one considers the possibility of Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz and the immediate energy crisis that would follow, the argument inevitably returns to nuclear power as a necessary option.
Still, one cannot help wondering what the American president, Donald Trump, was thinking when he initiated military action against Iran.
If it was truly meant to distract attention from the Epstein documents controversy and his own political troubles, then it would be difficult to call it anything but foolish.
We were told that air superiority would be achieved within days.
But unexpected drone attacks have already complicated that assumption.
Iran has reportedly attacked Arab oil-producing countries—fellow Islamic nations—and even begun laying naval mines.
It seems to be resorting to desperate tactics.
Yet it is not easy simply to dismiss such actions as foolish.
During the Pacific War, Japan’s military leadership once prepared for a decisive battle on the home islands.
What Iran’s Revolutionary Guard might ultimately decide to do is impossible for outsiders to predict.
Even if one speaks of regime change in Iran, no one truly knows what kind of political system would bring that country stability or happiness.
What can be said, however, is that the decision to abandon dialogue—the greatest “weapon” diplomacy possesses—carries enormous responsibility.
For a long time, the world seemed to maintain a fragile balance of peace.
When did that balance begin to break?
Perhaps the seeds were planted long ago.
At this point, it feels naïve to say that each of us can change the course of events simply through individual action, as we might during an election.
When we realize that we can only entrust ourselves to the great currents that move the world, a profound sense of helplessness begins to settle in.











