Herald-Tribune

Military investigat­ing ‘large balloon’ found off coast of Alaska

- Cybele Mayes-Osterman

Officials do not know what the balloon was doing off the coast of Alaska but hope to learn more through an analysis of the materiel.

Military officials are investigat­ing a “large balloon and payload” discovered by fishermen off the coast of Alaska last week, the Department of Defense confirmed Friday.

“A U.S. commercial fishing vessel recovered portions of ... what appears to be a large balloon and payload caught in their nets while fishing off the coast of Alaska,” Sue Gough, a spokespers­on for the Defense Department, said in an email.

The department would not characteri­ze the balloon as a spy or surveillan­ce device.

The fishermen first reported the discovery to the Coast Guard, who asked them to hold the materiel on board until it could be collected by officials upon the boat’s return to port, Gough said.

In a statement, the FBI said it was aware of debris found off the coast of Alaska by a commercial fishing vessel and assisted partners in debris recovery.

They had no further comment as of Friday afternoon.

The balloon is currently being analyzed at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, around 9 miles northeast of Anchorage. Officials do not know what the balloon was doing off the coast of Alaska but hope to learn more through an analysis of the materiel, which will be carried out by multiple agencies, Gough said.

The appearance and takedown of a Chinese spy balloon drifting over the U.S. last year propelled the issue to internatio­nal attention.

The balloon was first spotted floating over the Aleutian Islands in Alaska in late January 2023, according to the Pentagon. It drifted through Canada before entering U.S. airspace in Idaho and continuing eastward. At 11 miles above ground, it flew high enough to avoid interferin­g with commercial air traffic, defense officials said.

It was finally shot down off the coast of South Carolina on Feb. 4 by a missile fired from an F-22, the military’s most sophistica­ted warplane. President Joe Biden first gave the order to shoot it out of the sky three days earlier while the balloon was above land, but Pentagon officials feared the debris could endanger people on the ground.

The balloon triggered a diplomatic rift with China that prompted U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to cancel a planned trip to Beijing. The balloon had passed over some sensitive military sites, including facilities holding nuclear weapons and missiles in Montana, according to the State Department. U-2 spy planes sent to examine the balloon in midair found that it was equipped with devices to collect “signals intelligen­ce,” officials said.

China denied the balloon had espionage capabiliti­es, calling it a “civilian airship” that had been blown off course over the U.S. while conducting weather research, and apologized for its “unintentio­nal entry” into U.S. airspace.

The military launched a major operation led by the Navy’s Explosive Ordnance Disposal Group 2 to collect the balloon from the water after it was downed. Air Force Gen. Glen VanHerck said the balloon was 200 feet tall and weighed around 2,000 pounds – the size of around three buses.

Military officials revealed that the Pentagon was aware that suspected Chinese spy balloons had entered U.S. airspace three times during the Trump administra­tion and once afterward.

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