The Punxsutawney Spirit

As jets closed in on China balloon, hobbyists were listening

- By Tara Copp

WASHINGTON (AP) — The extraordin­ary scene of U.S. fighter jets getting ready to strike a Chinese balloon had many people along the Carolina coast straining their necks and pointing their smartphone­s to the sky to capture the moment of impact.

But a group of aviation enthusiast­s was, instead, intently scanning radio frequencie­s for the exchanges between the pilots who would follow as Huntress, NORAD’s eastern air defense sector controller, tracked the exact distance as two Air Force F-22 fighter jets closed in on the target.

The pilots had to balance striking the balloon when it was at least six miles offshore — the distance NASA had advised the military allow to keep debris from falling on land — with ensuring it was still in U.S. territoria­l airspace.

“Five miles offshore,” Huntress advises in a transmissi­on that was captured by aviation hobbyist Ken Harrell, in a recording that was authentica­ted by NORAD.

“Frank One is switches hot,” the first F-22 reports. The call sign “Frank” was given to both aircraft to honor 2nd Lt. Frank Luke, who earned the Medal of Honor in World War I for downing multiple balloons and aircraft.

“Frank Two is switches hot,” the second F-22 radios in.

When Huntress calls out that the balloon is exactly six nautical miles out, Frank One takes the shot.

“The balloon is completely destroyed!” radios an F-15 fighter jet that also took part in the mission, advising quickly that “there appears to be metal chaff clouds. … It’s definitely metal breaking apart.”

This audio, which was first reported by The War Zone, wasn’t on the civilian radio frequencie­s that commercial pilots use. The Air Force pilots were communicat­ing on an unencrypte­d military frequency that the North American Aerospace Defense Command uses to conduct missions to secure the eastern United States, under the control center named Huntress.

Aviation enthusiast­s with the right radios scan for Huntress missions and other military flights as a hobby, calling out exercises.

Ken Harrell, a 68-year-old retiree from Summervill­e, South Carolina, is one of those enthusiast­s. On Saturday, he recorded the exchange of the balloon shootdown.

NORAD confirmed the authentici­ty of the recording to The Associated Press in a statement.

When Harrell got started a few years ago, he said he “bought the right kind of scanner, put up, you know, a decent antenna and a lot of software to connect to the scanner and just started listening.” He said the scanner only cost about $160 to get started.

On Saturday, he got a call from a fellow enthusiast who said Huntress was guiding F-22s in to hit what the Pentagon has said was a spy balloon and China has insisted was a civilian weather balloon.

“He says, get on the scanner, man! Huntress has been controllin­g the F-22 Raptors, you know for the balloon, they’re gonna do it,” Harrell said. “So I jump up, crank up everything, and started listening in.”

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