The Daily Telegraph

Chinese spy balloon ‘may have carried explosives’

Defence officials reveal possibilit­y of ‘jet-sized’ load on the satellite that invaded US air space

- By Josie Ensor and Sophia Yan

THE Chinese spy balloon that flew over the United States last month may have been carrying explosives in a huge payload “the size of a jetliner”, a top Pentagon official revealed last night.

The satellite, which defence officials said yesterday weighed tens of thousands of pounds and was 200ft tall, may have had a built-in explosive selfdestru­ct function.

A US Air Force F-22 fighter jet shot down the Chinese spy balloon off the South Carolina coast on Saturday, a week after it first entered US airspace and triggered a dramatic spying saga that worsened Sino-us relations.

The USS Carter Hall landing ship has collected the majority of the debris, the Pentagon said, while the military is using sonar to locate any parts that may have sunk.

Air Force General Glen Vanherck, head of US North American Aerospace Defense Command and Northern Command, said they had so far ascertaine­d that the balloon had a payload the size of a regional jetliner, weighed “in excess of a couple thousand pounds”, and potentiall­y carried explosives “to detonate and destroy the balloon”.

He said experts continued to assess the debris, which covered the size of 15 football fields, and could not yet confirm whether there were indeed explosives.

The US Coast Guard said yesterday it was imposing a temporary security zone in the waters off Surfside Beach, South Carolina in the area where the balloon was shot down.

The 10 nautical mile security zone blocks vessels from entering without Coast Guard permission and is intended to protect the public “from potential hazards associated with physical objects”.

The Pentagon also revealed that Chinese spy balloons had briefly flown over the US at least three times during Donald Trump’s administra­tion and one previously under President Joe Biden. Jake Sullivan, the White House national security adviser, defended Mr Biden, saying that since he took office the US “enhanced our capacity to be able to detect things that the Trump administra­tion was unable to detect”.

General Vanherck conceded yesterday that previous spy attempts had been missed. He added that US intelligen­ce determined the previous flights after the fact based on “additional means of collection” of intelligen­ce without offering further details on whether that might be cyber espionage, telephone intercepts or human sources.

China admitted yesterday that it launched a second observatio­n balloon, which it said had “accidental­ly strayed” over Latin America after being blown off course. The latest balloon was spotted by US and Colombian officials after a similar alleged spy balloon was shot down on the order of Mr Biden.

China’s foreign ministry yesterday acknowledg­ed the balloon was Chinese. “It has come to be understood that the relevant unmanned airship is from China,” said Mao Ning, a spokeswoma­n. The device “seriously deviated from its scheduled route and accidental­ly strayed over Latin America and the Caribbean”, she added.

This is similar to what Beijing said of the first balloon discovered, which had hovered in Montana over a major US nuclear missile silo complex.

China has maintained that it was a weather research “airship” that had blown off course, denying US allegation­s that the balloon had served surveillan­ce and espionage functions.

Mr Biden’s press secretary, Karine Jean-pierre, said last night: “Shooting the balloon down over water wasn’t just the safest option; it maximised the chance of recovering the payload, giving us a better chance to get informatio­n from the Chinese surveillan­ce balloon.”

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