The Hamilton Spectator

U.S.’s ‘floaty-bag’ problem is solved

- GWYNNE DYER GWYNNE DYER’S LATEST BOOK IS “THE SHORTEST HISTORY OF WAR.”

The United States has been having “a bit of a floaty-bag problem over its airspace,” as South Africa’s Daily Maverick news-site put it.

Indeed it has. Four balloons or other flying “objects” shot down by the U.S. Air Force over American or Canadian territory in eight days got everybody’s attention, and made the already fragile state of U.S.-Chinese relations a good deal worse.

The first unknown flying object, a big Chinese balloon — 70 metres high, with an instrument payload the size of several buses — was obviously in the wrong place. It was clearly designed to gather “sigint” (signals intelligen­ce), but flying it across the United States, even 20 kilometres up, was just asking for trouble. Are the Chinese really that stupid?

No, they aren’t. Mumbled explanatio­ns to the Washington Post by embarrasse­d American officials have now revealed that U.S. intelligen­ce services saw the balloon launched from Hainan island off the southern Chinese coast in late January — and it was headed straight east for the U.S.-owned island of Guam.

The Chinese balloon had propellers and a rudder, so it was steerable within limits. China has actually sent balloons past Guam before, and the U.S. didn’t complain, because it does the same sort of thing with its own reconnaiss­ance aircraft.

However, this time was different. On Jan. 24, when the balloon was passing directly south of Japan, it veered north and began speeding up. Exceptiona­lly cold air over northern China and Japan had drawn the high-altitude jet stream south, and it scooped up the balloon, also high in the stratosphe­re, and carried it north and east across the Pacific.

The winds were too strong for the Chinese balloon’s limited propulsion system to counter, so on Jan. 28 it entered Alaskan airspace and continued east into Canada, where it was then blown south by more strong winds, entering U.S. airspace again over Montana.

Authoritie­s were initially reluctant to shoot the balloon down, because they knew the whole story. But they wouldn’t say what they knew, because that would reveal U.S. surveillan­ce capabiliti­es, so the political pressure to “do something” grew. Finally, U.S. President Biden gave the shootdown order — waiting until the balloon was safely over the Atlantic.

So it’s just a simple story of everyday superpower folk getting it wrong, and apologies are due all round. But the Chinese won’t elaborate on their original story that it was just an errant weather balloon, and the U.S. won’t apologize at all. Like the four-year-olds they so often resemble, the Masters of the Universe find it almost impossible to make a real apology.

Meanwhile, what about the other three “objects” that were shot down? They were much smaller, and came in a variety of shapes and shades: “cylindrica­l, silver grey, with no sign of visible propulsion”; “a small, metallic balloon with a tethered payload below it”; “octagonal, with strings attached.”

They were shot down too, said John Kirby, the National Security Council Coordinato­r for Strategic Communicat­ions, “out of an abundance of caution.” But on Tuesday he had to go out on the White House stage again and confess that those three had probably been completely harmless.

“These could be balloons that were simply tied to commercial or research entities and therefore benign,” he said. Was there any lasting damage? Yes, of course there was.

These incidents have held the U.S. media’s attention for more than an week. The details will quickly fade from the American public’s memory, but the impression will remain that somebody, and probably somebody Chinese, has been spying on them in their own homes.

This will not help in the task of calming the growing hostility between the world’s two greatest powers.

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