Muscat Daily

US says second Chinese ‘spy balloon’ over Latin America

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Washington, US - A Chinese spy balloon has been spotted over Latin America, the Pentagon said on Friday, a day after a similar craft was seen in US skies, prompting the scrapping of a rare trip to Beijing by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

The Pentagon said the first balloon was now heading eastwards over the central United States, adding it was not being shot down for safety reasons.

Later on Friday, Pentagon spokesman Pat Ryder said: “We are seeing reports of a balloon transiting Latin America.”

“We now assess it is another Chinese surveillan­ce balloon,” he added, without specifying its exact location.

Moments before Blinken’s decision to cancel his trip - aimed at easing tensions between the two countries - China issued a rare statement of regret over the first balloon and blamed winds for pushing what it called a civilian airship into US airspace.

But President Joe Biden’s administra­tion described it as a maneuverab­le ‘surveillan­ce balloon’.

With the rival Republican Party already on the offensive, Blinken postponed a two-day visit that was to have started on Sunday.

In a telephone call with senior Chinese official Wang Yi, Blinken said he ‘made clear that the presence of this surveillan­ce balloon in US airspace is a clear violation of US sovereignt­y and internatio­nal law, that it’s an irresponsi­ble act’.

Blinken said, however, that he told Wang ‘the United States is committed to diplomatic en

gagement with China and that I plan to visit Beijing when conditions allow’.

“The first step is getting the surveillan­ce asset out of our airspace. That’s what we’re focused on,” Blinken told reporters.

According to Chinese state news agency Xinhua, Wang said the two discussed the incident ‘in a calm and profession­al manner’.

“China is a responsibl­e country and has always strictly abided by internatio­nal law,” Xinhua quoted Wang as telling Blinken.

“We do not accept any

groundless speculatio­n and hype,” he said, calling both sides to ‘avoid misjudgmen­ts and manage divergence’.

‘Pretext to attack China’

On Saturday, the Chinese foreign ministry released a statement addressing Blinken’s announceme­nt that his trip would not go ahead.

“Some politician­s and media in the United States used the (balloon) incident as a pretext to attack and smear China,” it said.

The statement further added in regard to Blinken’s trip, which had been widely publicised in the United States: “As a matter of fact, neither China nor the United States has announced any visit.

“It is the United States’ own decision to release the relevant informatio­n and we respect that.”

Blinken would have been the first top US diplomat to visit China since October 2018, sig

naling a thaw following intense friction under former president Donald Trump.

Last month, Blinken said he would use the trip to help establish ‘guardrails’ to prevent the relationsh­ip from escalating into all-out conflict.

Republican lawmakers, meanwhile, were quick to pounce on the balloon incident, casting Biden - who has largely preserved, and at times expanded, Trump’s hawkish policies on China - as weak.

“President Biden should stop coddling and appeasing the Chinese communists. Bring the balloon down now and exploit its tech package, which could be an intelligen­ce bonanza,” tweeted Senator Tom Cotton, a prominent hardliner who had urged Blinken to call off his trip.

“Shoot down the balloon!” added Trump on his Truth Social media platform.

‘Force majeure’

After initial hesitation, Beijing admitted ownership of the ‘airship’ and said it veered off course due to wind.

“The airship is from China. It is a civilian airship used for research, mainly meteorolog­ical, purposes,” said the statement attributed to a foreign ministry spokespers­on.

“The Chinese side regrets the unintended entry of the airship into US airspace due to force majeure,” it said, using the legal term for an act outside of human control. A US defense official said earlier that Biden had asked for military options but that the Pentagon believed shooting the object down would put people on the ground at risk from debris.

The balloon has ‘limited additive value from an intelligen­ce collection perspectiv­e’, the defense official told reporters on condition of anonymity.

The United States is also widely believed to spy on China, although generally with more advanced technology than balloons. The northweste­rn United States is home to sensitive airbases and nuclear weapons in undergroun­d silos.

China is a responsibl­e country and has always strictly abided by internatio­nal law. We do not accept any groundless speculatio­n and hype... avoid misjudgmen­ts and manage divergence WANG YI

 ?? (AFP) ?? This handout photo from Chase Doak taken on Wednesday and released on Thursday shows a suspected Chinese spy balloon in the sky over Billings, Montana
(AFP) This handout photo from Chase Doak taken on Wednesday and released on Thursday shows a suspected Chinese spy balloon in the sky over Billings, Montana

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