Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Biden: New rules on aerial objects coming

‘Interagenc­y team’ plans review after downings

- Zeke Miller and Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden said Thursday that the U.S. is developing “sharper rules” to track, monitor and potentiall­y shoot down unknown aerial objects, following three weeks of high-stakes drama sparked by the discovery of a suspected Chinese spy balloon transiting much of the country.

The president has directed national security adviser Jake Sullivan to lead an “interagenc­y team” to review U.S. procedures after the U.S. shot down the Chinese balloon, as well as three other objects that Biden said the U.S. now believes are most likely “benign” objects launched by private companies or research institutio­ns.

While not expressing regret for downing the three still-unidentified objects, Biden said he hoped the new rules would help “distinguis­h between those that are likely to pose safety and security risks that necessitat­e action and those that do not.”

“Make no mistake, if any object presents a threat to the safety and security of the American people, I will take it down,” he added, repeating the legal justification cited for the downings – that the objects, flying between 20,000 and 40,000 feet, posed a remote risk to civilian planes.

The downing of the Chinese surveillan­ce craft was the first known peacetime shoot-down of an unauthoriz­ed object in U.S. airspace – a feat repeated three times a week later.

Biden sharply criticized China’s surveillan­ce program, saying the shootdown sent a “clear message, the violation of our sovereignt­y is unacceptab­le,” but said he looks to maintain open lines of communicat­ion with Beijing. Secretary of State Antony Blinken postponed his first planned trip to China as the balloon was flying over the

U.S., and a new meeting with his Chinese counterpar­t has yet to be scheduled.

“I expect to be speaking with President Xi (Jinping), and I hope we can get to the bottom of this,” Biden said, adding, “But I make no apologies for taking down that balloon.”

Biden said the rules would remain classified so as not to “give a road map to our enemies to try to evade our defenses.”

The Chinese balloon has escalated tensions between the U.S. and China. Blinken travels Thursday to the Munich Security Conference, and there is speculatio­n he might use the opportunit­y to meet top Chinese foreign policy official Wang Yi, who will also be attending.

Biden had remained largely silent on the objects downed Friday off the coast of Alaska, Saturday over Canada and Sunday over Lake Huron. On Monday, the White House announced earnestly there was no indication of “aliens or extraterre­strial activity.” By Wednesday, U.S. officials said they were still working to locate the wreckage from the objects, but that they expected all three to be unrelated to surveillan­ce efforts.

“The intelligen­ce community is considerin­g as a leading explanatio­n that these could just be balloons tied to some commercial or benign purpose,” said White House national security spokesman John Kirby. No country or private company has come forward to claim any of the objects, Kirby said. They do not appear to have been operated by the U.S. government.

Still unaddresse­d are questions about the original balloon, including what spying capabiliti­es it had and whether it was transmitti­ng signals as it flew over sensitive military sites in the United States. It was believed by American intelligen­ce to have initially been on a track toward the U.S. territory of Guam, according to a U.S. official.

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