San Antonio Express-News

Officials: China uses balloons to spy on military

- By Julian E. Barnes, Edward Wong and Helene Cooper

WASHINGTON — U.S. intelligen­ce agencies have assessed that China’s spy balloon program is part of a global surveillan­ce effort that is designed to collect informatio­n on the military capabiliti­es of countries around the world, according to three American officials.

The balloon flights, some officials believe, are part of an effort by China to hone its ability to gather data about U.S. military bases as well as those of other nations in the event of a conflict or rising tensions. U.S. officials said this week that the balloon program has operated out of multiple locations in China.

At a news conference Wednesday, Brig Gen. Patrick S. Ryder, the Pentagon spokespers­on, said that over the past several years, Chinese balloons have been spotted operating over Latin America, South America, Southeast Asia, East Asia and Europe.

“This is what we assess as part of a larger Chinese surveillan­ce balloon program,” Ryder said.

Antony Blinken, the U.S. secretary of state, said at another news conference in Washington that the State Department has shared informatio­n on the spy balloon program with dozens of countries, both in meetings in Washington and through U.S. embassies abroad.

The balloons have some advantages over the satellites that orbit the Earth in regular patterns, U.S. officials say. They fly closer to Earth and drift with wind patterns, which are not as predictabl­e to militaries and intelligen­ce agencies as the fixed orbits of satellites, and they can evade radar. They can also hover over areas while satellites are generally in constant motion. Simple cameras on balloons can produce clearer images than those on orbital satellites, and other surveillan­ce equipment can pick up signals that do not reach the altitude of satellites.

American officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, said that intelligen­ce agencies during the Biden administra­tion had developed a far deeper understand­ing of the scope and size of the Chinese spy balloon effort, discoverin­g earlier incursions that had been classified as unknown events and tracking new operations by the Chinese spy balloons.

Before last week, the United States had tracked Chinese surveillan­ce balloons collecting informatio­n from more than a dozen countries around the world, officials said. Some of the Chinese efforts appeared to be focused on the Pacific region, and a number of the balloons and other Chinese surveillan­ce efforts have been detected over U.S. allies and partners in that region.

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