The Northern Advocate

US missile fires down China ‘spy balloon’

Fighter jet used to shoot white orb off Carolina coast

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What in the world was that thing? The massive white orb that drifted across US airspace this week and was shot down by the Air Force over the Atlantic on live television yesterday triggered a diplomatic maelstrom and blew up on social media.

China insists the balloon was just an errant civilian airship used mainly for meteorolog­ical research that went off course due to winds and had only limited “self-steering” capabiliti­es.

The United States says it was a Chinese spy balloon without a doubt. Its presence prompted Secretary of State Antony Blinken to cancel a weekend trip to China that was aimed at dialling down tensions that were already high between the countries.

The Pentagon says the balloon, which was carrying sensors and surveillan­ce equipment, was maneuverab­le and showed it could change course. It loitered over sensitive areas of Montana where nuclear warheads are siloed, leading the military to take actions to prevent it from collecting intelligen­ce.

A US Air Force fighter jet shot down the balloon yesterday off the Carolina coast. Television footage showed a small explosion, followed by the balloon slowly drifting toward the water. An operation is underway to recover the remnants.

It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s a . . . spy balloon

The Pentagon and other US officials say it was a Chinese spy balloon — about the size of three school buses — that moved east over America at an altitude of about 18,600m. The US says it was being used for surveillan­ce and intelligen­ce collection, but officials have provided few details.

US defence and military officials said the balloon entered the US air defence zone north of the Aleutian Islands on January 28 and moved over land across Alaska and into Canadian airspace in the Northwest Territorie­s on January 30. The next day it crossed back into US territory over northern Idaho. US spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive topic.

The White House said Biden was first briefed on the balloon on Tuesday. The State Department said Blinken and Deputy Secretary Wendy Sherman spoke with China’s senior Washington-based official on Wednesday about the matter.

In the first public US statement, Brigadier General Pat Ryder, the Pentagon press secretary, said the balloon was not a military or physical threat — an acknowledg­ement that it was not carrying weapons. He said that “once the balloon was detected, the US government acted immediatel­y to protect against the collection of sensitive informatio­n.”

Even if the balloon was not armed, it posed a risk to the US, said retired Army General John Ferrari, a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. The flight itself, he said, could be used to test America’s ability to detect incoming threats and to find holes in the country’s air defence warning system. It may also have allowed the Chinese to sense electromag­netic emissions that higheralti­tude satellites cannot detect, such as low-power radio frequencie­s that could help them understand how different US weapons systems communicat­e.

It just took one shot

On Thursday as the balloon loitered over Montana, Biden authorised the

military to shoot it down as soon as it was in a location where there would not be undue risk to civilians.

Due to its massive size and altitude, the debris field of its sensors and the balloon itself was expected to stretch for miles. So top military and defence leaders advised Biden not to take it down over land, even when it was over sparsely populated areas.

Yesterday, as the balloon flew in US airspace about 6 nautical miles off the coast of South Carolina, a single F-22 fighter jet from Virginia’s Langley Air Force Base — flying at an altitude of 17,678m — fired an AIM-9X Sidewinder into it.

The Sidewinder is a short-range missile used by the Navy and Air Force primarily for air-to-air engagement­s, the missile is about 3m long and weighs about 90kg.

Live news feeds showed the moment of impact, as the balloon collapsed and began a lengthy fall into the Atlantic.

The F-22 was supported by an array of Air Force and Air National Guard fighter jets and tankers, including F-15s from Massachuse­tts and tanker aircraft from Oregon, Montana, Massachuse­tts, South Carolina and North Carolina.

All pilots returned safely to base and there were no injuries or other damage on the ground, a senior military official told reporters.

Picking up the pieces

As the deflated balloon was slowly drifting down, US Navy vessels had already moved in, waiting to collect the debris.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion had temporaril­y closed airspace over the Carolina coast, including the airports in Myrtle Beach and Charleston, South Carolina, and Wilmington, North Carolina. And the FAA and Coast Guard worked to clear the airspace and water below the balloon.

Once the balloon crashed into the water, US officials said, the debris field stretched at least 11km, and was in water 14m deep.

That depth is shallower than what they had planned, making it easier to retrieve pieces of the sensor package and other parts that may be salvageabl­e.

Officials said the USS Oscar Austin, a Navy destroyer, the USS Carter Hall, a dock landing ship, and the USS Philippine Sea, a guided missile cruiser, are all part of the recovery effort, and a salvage vessel will arrive in a few days. They said Navy divers will be on hand if needed, along with unmanned vessels that can recover debris and lift it back up to the ships. The FBI will also be present to categorise and assess anything recovered, officials said.

As for intelligen­ce value, the US officials said the balloon’s voyage across the US gave experts several days to analyse it, gather technical data, and learn a lot about what it was doing, how it was doing it and why China may be using things like this. They declined to provide details, but said they expect to learn more as they gather and scrutinize the debris.

Spy balloons have a history

Spy balloons aren’t new — primitive ones date back centuries — but they came into greater use in World War II.

US officials said similar Chinese balloons transited the continenta­l United States briefly at least three times during the Trump administra­tion and once that they know about earlier in the Biden administra­tion. But none of those incidents lasted this length of time.

During World War II, Japan launched thousands of hydrogen balloons carrying bombs, and hundreds ended up in the US and Canada. Most were ineffectiv­e, but one was lethal. In May 1945, six civilians died when they found one of the balloons on the ground in Oregon, and it exploded.

In the aftermath of the war, America’s own balloon effort ignited the alien stories and lore linked to Roswell, New Mexico.

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