Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

U.S. halts hunt for downed mystery objects

Effort to retrieve parts of large balloon ends

- By Tara Copp and Lolita C. Baldor

The U.S. military said Friday that it has ended its search for airborne objects that were shot down near Deadhorse, Alaska, and over Lake Huron on Feb. 10 and 12.

The statement released Friday came hours after officials said the U.S. finished efforts to recover the remnants of the large balloon that was shot down Feb. 4 off the coast of South Carolina, and analysis of the debris reinforces conclusion­s that it was a Chinese spy balloon.

Officials said the U.S. believes that Navy, Coast Guard and FBI personnel collected all of that balloon’s debris off the ocean floor, which included equipment from the payload that could reveal what informatio­n it was able to monitor and collect.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby said a significan­t amount of debris was recovered and it included “electronic­s and optics” from the payload. He declined to say what, if anything, the U.S. has learned from the wreckage.

U.S. Northern Command said in a statement that the recovery operations ended Thursday and the final pieces are on their way to the FBI lab in Virginia for analysis. It said air and maritime restrictio­ns off South Carolina have been lifted.

Northern Command said later that the decision to end the search for the objects shot down over Alaska and Lake Huron came after the U.S. and Canada “conducted systematic searches of each area using a variety of capabiliti­es, including airborne imagery and sensors, surface sensors and inspection­s, and subsurface scans, and did not locate debris.” Northern Command said air and maritime safety perimeters were also being lifted at both those sites.

The announceme­nts capped three dramatic weeks that saw U.S. fighter jets shoot down four airborne objects — the large Chinese balloon on Feb. 4 and three much smaller objects about a week later over Canada, Alaska and Lake Huron. They are the first known peacetime shootdowns of unauthoriz­ed objects in U.S. airspace.

While the military is confident the balloon shot down off South Carolina was a surveillan­ce airship operated by China, the Biden administra­tion has admitted that the three smaller objects were likely civilian-owned balloons that were targeted during the heightened response, after U.S. homeland defense radars were recalibrat­ed to detect slower moving airborne items.

Much of the Chinese balloon fell into about 50 feet of water, and the Navy was able to collect remnants floating on the surface, and divers and unmanned naval vessels pulled up the rest from the bottom of the ocean.

On Thursday, President Joe Biden directed national security adviser Jake Sullivan to lead an interagenc­y team to establish “sharper rules” to track, monitor and potentiall­y shoot down unknown aerial objects.

Meanwhile, questions about the Chinese balloon remain unanswered, including what, if any, intelligen­ce it was able to collect as it flew over sensitive military sites in the United States, and whether it was able to transmit anything back to China.

The U.S. tracked it for several days after it left China, said a U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligen­ce. It appears to have been blown off its initial trajectory, which was toward the U.S. territory of Guam, and flew over the continenta­l U.S., the official said.

 ?? U.S. Navy ?? U.S. Navy sailors retrieve remains of a surveillan­ce balloon on Feb. 5 off the coast of Myrtle Beach, S.C. Recovery of pieces of the possible spy balloon ended Thursday.
U.S. Navy U.S. Navy sailors retrieve remains of a surveillan­ce balloon on Feb. 5 off the coast of Myrtle Beach, S.C. Recovery of pieces of the possible spy balloon ended Thursday.

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