GENERAL: MILITARY DIDN’T DETECT PRIOR INCURSIONS
Chinese surveillance balloons exposing deficiency, he says
The top U.S. general responsible for protecting North American skies said Monday that past incursions by Chinese balloons went undetected by the Pentagon, exposing what he characterized as a worrisome deficiency that must be addressed.
The Defense Department has acknowledged that the craft shot down Saturday off the South Carolina coast after a dayslong journey across the U.S. mainland marked at least the fifth time in recent years that Beijing has breached the nation’s airspace using such technology. Officials informed lawmakers over the weekend that, dating back to Donald Trump’s presidency, there had been similar breaches near Texas, Florida, Hawaii and Guam.
“As NORAD commander, it’s my responsibility to detect threats to North America,” Gen. Glen VanHerck, who oversees the North American Aerospace Defense Command, told reporters during a news briefing. “I will tell you that we did not detect those threats. And that’s a domain awareness gap that we have to figure out.”
VanHerck declined to elaborate, saying only that it was the U.S. intelligence community that “made us aware of those balloons” after the fact.
The Pentagon’s disclosure over the weekend that previous Chinese incursions occurred during Trump’s time in the White House was met with surprise by the former president and a number of senior officials who held prominent national security posts in his administration. VanHerck’s acknowledgment appeared to offer an explanation for how that may have happened.
The Biden administration has “reached out to key officials from the previous administration and offered them briefings on the forensics we did” on Chinese balloon flights that took place when Trump was in office, John Kirby, the National Security Council strategic communications coordinator, said earlier Monday.
Biden administration officials have said at least three such flights took place during Trump’s tenure, with another occurring earlier during President Joe Biden’s time in office, in February 2022.
“I can’t speak to what awareness there was in the previous administration,” Kirby said. “I can tell you that we discovered these flights after we came into office.” The previous flights were “brief ” and “nothing like we saw last week,” he said.
As U.S. military officials tracked last week’s incident, Canadian officials indicated that they were monitoring whether a second balloon was aloft over their airspace. VanHerck said during Monday’s news conference that he dispatched Canadian CF-18 jets assigned to NORAD to investigate but that they found nothing. On Friday, the Pentagon disclosed that a second surveillance balloon had been discovered over Latin America. The
Washington Post reported over the weekend that a third was being monitored elsewhere.
The craft shot down Saturday was about 200 feet tall and carrying equipment measuring roughly the size of a regional jet liner, VanHerck said, estimating its weight to be 2,000 pounds.
Efforts are under way to recover the wreckage, though VanHerck offered few details about what the United States has since learned about China’s intent or the technology it used. It is too early to tell how much of the craft will be salvageable, he said.