New Straits Times

Japan lawmakers probe UFO security ‘threat’

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TOKYO: UFO sightings should not be dismissed out of hand because they could in fact be surveillan­ce drones or weapons, say Japanese lawmakers who launched a group yesterday to probe the matter.

The non-partisan group, which counts former defence ministers among its 80-plus members, will urge Japan to ramp up abilities to detect and analyse unidentifi­ed anomalous phenomena (UAP), more commonly known as UFOs.

Although the phenomenon is often associated with little green men in the popular imaginatio­n, it has become a hot political topic in the United States.

Washington said last year it was examining 510 UFO reports — more than triple the number in its 2021 file — and Nasa in September said it wants to shift the conversati­on “from sensationa­lism to science”.

The Japanese parliament­arians hope to bring the domestic perception of UAP in line with its ally's following several scares related to suspected surveillan­ce operations.

“It is extremely irresponsi­ble of us to be resigned to the fact that something is unknowable, and to keep turning a blind eye to the unidentifi­ed,” group member and former defence minister Yasukazu Hamada said.

In an embarrassm­ent for Japan’s defence ministry, unauthoris­ed footage of a docked helicopter destroyer recently spread on Chinese social media after an apparent drone intrusion into a military facility.

In Japan, UFOs have long been seen as “an occult matter that has nothing to do with politics”, opposition lawmaker Yoshiharu Asakawa, a pivotal member of the group, has said.

But if they turn out to be "cutting-edge secret weapons or spying drones in disguise, they can pose a significan­t threat to our nation’s security”.

The US Defence Department in 2022 establishe­d the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) to investigat­e UAP.

An AARO report last year designated the region stretching from western Japan to China as a “hotspot” for UAP sightings, based on trends between 1996 and 2023.

It later concluded in a congressio­nally ordered 60-page review that there was no evidence of alien technology, or attempts by the US government to hide it from the public.

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