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szdaily -> Kaleidoscope -> 
Military given instructions on UFOs
    2020-09-17  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

THE Japanese military have been given instructions to record and report sightings of unidentified aerial objects which could pose a potential threat to the country’s security.

Taro Kono, the country’s minister for defense, issued the instructions following the U.S. department of defense founding its Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP) Task Force.

While the popular imagination has been excited by UFOs, the military takes UAPs — as they are formally known — very seriously.

The risk for security officials is that the spotted aircraft are something which an untrained observer is unable to identify, but which could be a foreign incursion into domestic airspace.

But sometimes the UAPs appear to be even more mysterious.

Earlier this year the Pentagon declassified three videos of strange elliptical objects racing across the sky.

The black and white videos were recorded by Navy pilots — one in November 2004 and two in January 2015, according to the U.S. Department of Defense.

One of the clips shows a dark circular object flying in front of a jet, another shows a small object speeding over land and the third shows a circular object racing and then appearing to slow down as it approaches the camera.

Kono cited these videos and explained that while the Japanese defense force pilots are not believed to have ever encountered a UAP, his intention was to develop a procedure in case such an encounter ever took place.

It is not the first time that members of the Japanese Government have broached the topic.

The defense ministry previously stated in 2015 that it had never encountered alien spacecraft although the country’s then chief Cabinet secretary, Nobutaka Machimura, said: “Personally, I absolutely believe they exist.”

Then-defense minister Shigeru Ishiba added that in his personal opinion there were “no grounds” to deny that there are UFOs controlled by alien life-forms, although this was not the official government position.

Astronaut Edgar Mitchell, the lunar module pilot for Apollo 14, publicly stated he was personally 90 percent sure that many reports of unidentified flying objects, or UFOs, “belong to visitors from other planets.”

He suggested that he had met officials from foreign countries who had personal encounters with alien beings, and suggested that governments were covering up such contacts. (SD-Agencies)

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