Germany has no protocol to follow in the event of contact with life from
outer space. Research has shown that if aliens did show up on Earth,
humans would actually be happy to meet them.
The German government has "no plans or protocol" should first contact with aliens occur, according to a report by German daily Bild.
The
government considers such an event "extremely unlikely according to
current scientific knowledge," the Ministry of Economics said when
responding to a question from Green MP Dieter Janecek.
Read more: Germans believe in aliens
"Concrete
cases that could have been the subject of bilateral or multilateral
talks with other states are not known," the ministry's statement
continued.
United States has a plan
While Germany might not have a plan for extraterrestrial visitors, the US is more prepared. Even before the establishment of a Space Force
that US President Donald Trump has recently said he plans to created as
a new branch of the military, the 527th Space Aggressors Squadron is
already a part of the United States Air Force. It aims to train US,
joint and allied military forces for combat with "space-capable
adversaries."
Read more: Aliens calling? Scientists detect 'peculiar' signals from
nearby star
The Air Force squadron regularly conducts
drills designed to simulate what a space attack might look like if an
otherworldly adversary attempted one.
From 2007-2012, the US also
ran a task force that investigated sightings of unidentified flying
objects with an annual budget of $22 million (€19.2 million). The UK has
also run UFO sighting projects in the past.
How would humans react?
If humans were to cross paths with aliens we'd actually be fairly happy, according to research presented early this year by the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
"If
we came face-to-face with life outside of Earth, we would actually be
pretty upbeat about it," study author Michael Varnum of Arizona State
University said in a statement.
After analyzing past media
coverage about possible findings of extraterrestrial microbial life,
Varnum found most people's reactions were positive.
In two
following studies asking respondents what their hypothetical reaction
would be if researchers did discover signs of life beyond Earth, or if
researchers created a new life form in the lab, participants were still
more positive than negative and were more excited about finding alien
life than synthetically-created life.
The research found that
about half of Americans and Western Europeans surveyed elsewhere said
they believe aliens have already visited Earth, Varnum said, and there
does not seem to be any "chaos or disorder in the world" as a result.
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