http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/waiwai/news/20070421p2g00m0dm002000c.html By Masuo Kamiyama People's Pick contributor April 21, 2007 "To be frank, the biggest annoyance that servicemen face is related in some manner to their not having a girlfriend." Speaking is a former officer of the Japan Ground Self Defense Forces. He continues. "A lot of the soldiers are good guys, but because of the nature of their work, they have no chance to meet women." The sad fact, opines Weekly Playboy (April 30), is that for members of Japan's armed forces, romance is a constant struggle to avoid falling into a variety of booby traps. As a result, the only women with whom they tend to form serious relationships are the daughters of sympathizers of the military, or those who have friends or family members in the service -- of whom there are not that many to begin with. This is not to say that there aren't other women out there who are interested in forming relationships with members of the JSDF. But their motives for befriending a lonely serviceman may be a problem. Especially if they happen to be nationals of a certain large Asian country that has begun to increasingly assert its presence in the East China Sea. Which brings us to a 33-year old member of the Maritime Self Defense Forces, who, as the media recently reported, leaked highly sensitive data on advanced Aegis cruisers. According to a joint investigation with the Naval Investigation unit and the Kanagawa prefectural police, the man's Chinese wife was found involved in the shenanigans, and charged, not with espionage, but with violating the immigration law! "The Defense Ministry has been trying to play down the affair," says Shinsaku Yanai, a former military intelligence officer. "There was a big ruckus years ago when a member of the military got nabbed passing secrets to the former Soviet embassy, and since then the authorities try to play it down. The reason in this case is that they will really be discredited in the eyes of the Americans, which supplies Japan with the Aegis technology. Also, Japan is in the process of trying to mend fences with China. "When military factors are weighed against political expediency, you can count on people to seek a 'political solution.'" The Aegis incident is just one of a number of recent cases where Japanese servicemen have been lured into so-called "honey traps" by Chinese women. In other countries these usually involve extorting them by use of compromising photos and, in extreme cases, drugging and abductions. But the simplest way, which has proved surprisingly effective, is just to treat the grateful servicemen with affection. By this method, extracting useful information from service members, Weekly Playboy remarks, has proved as easy as twisting the proverbial baby's arm. "The Public Security Intelligence Agency has become aware of an (unnamed) organization that is placing Chinese females into areas close to Maritime Self Defense Forces bases," says military affairs analyst Toya Busujima. "I suppose that incidents like the one that recently occurred will continue." "Just the other day, a noncommissioned officer at the GSDF base at Shimoshizu, Chiba Prefecture, allowed data on the layout of an arms depot at the camp in Matsudo to be leaked from his personal computer through a virus he downloaded from an adult Web site," says Busujima. Soldiers, it seems, have little social life. On their days off, they just linger in their rooms at the barracks, seldom emerging to date women, and instead whiling away their free time perusing adult sites. The same situation appears to apply to young policemen as well. "Not popular? Oh come on!" exclaims a 35-year-old police inspector. "Our guys don't even know how to talk to a girl. And they're completely intimidated by the type of girls they meet in their work." Why is this problematic? Weekly Playboy points out that one of the things science geeks or researchers and cops have in common is access to "important information" -- which is why they are targeted by wily foreign females. And should things keep going the way they are, Japan risks becoming a land of the lost due to the "popularity gap" that keeps such males from forming relationships with their own countrywomen. Perhaps the problem is simply one of image. "In America, Hollywood depicts soldiers as gallant and dashing figures," says military affairs journalist Shinichi Kiyotani. "Can't Japan do the same thing in films and TV dramas that'll burnish the image of the JSDF and servicemen and cause girls to get the hots for men in uniform?" So come on then, o women of Japan: Your country, Nippon, is calling you, to fulfill your duty and befriend one of the nation's valiant defenders -- a dashing young soldier, sailor or airman. How about it? __________________________ Subscribe to InfoSec News http://www.infosecnews.org
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