Another version of the alien defense story.
Japanese Official Seeks Defense Against Aliens
By MIWA SUZUKI, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, TOKYO
As Japan takes a more active role in military affairs, the defense minister has more on his mind than just threats here on Earth.
Shigeru Ishiba became the second member of the cabinet to profess a belief in UFOs and said he was looking at how Japan’s military could respond to aliens under the pacifist constitution.
“There are no grounds for us to deny that there are unidentified flying objects (UFOs) and some life form that controls them,” Ishiba told reporters, saying it was his personal view and not that of the defense ministry.
Ishiba, nicknamed a “security geek” for his wonkish knowledge of defense affairs, noted that Japan deployed its military against Godzilla in the classic monster movie.
“Few discussions have been made on what the legal grounds were for that,” the minister said with a slight grin, drawing laughter from reporters.
Because of the U.S.-imposed 1947 constitution, Japan’s de facto military is known as the Self-Defense Forces and has never fired a shot in combat since World War II.
But Japan has gradually sought a greater global military role, sending troops to support U.S.-led operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Ishiba said he was examining different scenarios for an alien invasion.
“If they descended, saying ‘People of the Earth, let’s make friends,’ it would not be considered an urgent, unjust attack on our country,” Ishiba said.
“And there is another issue of how can we convey our intentions if we don’t understand what they are saying?” he asked.
“We should consider various possibilities,” he said. “There is no need at all to do this as the defense ministry, but I want to consider what to do by myself.”
But the growing debate on UFOs did not appear to reach a cabinet consensus.
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda, asked about UFOs, told reporters: “I haven’t seen one myself.”
Ishiba’s remarks came after the government this week said it had no knowledge of UFOs, prompting a surprise rebuttal from the top government spokesman.
“Personally, I absolutely believe they exist,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura said Dec. 18.
The government was pressed to take up the issue after an opposition lawmaker, Ryuji Yamane, asked for the first official comment on UFOs.
He argued Tokyo should try to confirm what UFOs are as many people have said they have witnessed them.
“The government has not confirmed the existence of ‘unidentified flying objects believed to have flown from outside the Earth’,” said the government statement, which was formally endorsed at a cabinet meeting Dec. 18.
UFOs have also made a surprise entry into the U.S. presidential race, with liberal Rep. Dennis Kucinich telling a televised debate with other Democratic candidates that he had witnessed one.