Las Vegas Review-Journal

US postpones Blinken’s China visit in uproar over balloon

- By Jenny Leonard, Peter Martin and Jennifer Jacobs

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion postponed Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s upcoming trip to Beijing after detecting a Chinese surveillan­ce balloon that was lingering at high altitude over sensitive nuclear sites in Montana.

“It was a consensus that that it was not appropriat­e to travel to the People’s Republic of China at this time,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-pierre told reporters Friday. Despite a Chinese statement of regret, she said, “the presence of this balloon in our airspace — it is a clear violation of our sovereignt­y as well as internatio­nal law, and it is unacceptab­le this occurred.”

Blinken was set to have meetings in Beijing early next week in the first such visit by a top U.S. diplomat in five years. But the presence of the balloon — which the Pentagon decided not to shoot down — led officials to decide that going now would send the wrong signal, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified discussing internal deliberati­ons.

President Joe Biden was first briefed on the balloon on Tuesday and asked the military to present options, Jean-pierre said. Biden was told that the Pentagon opposed shooting the balloon down “because of the risks to the safety and security of the people on the ground,” she said.

The U.S. is continuing to track the balloon closely and is “keeping all options on the table,” she added.

China took unusually conciliato­ry steps to smooth over the incident Friday, with the Foreign Ministry saying it was “regretful” that a civilian airship entered U.S. airspace because of forces beyond its control. It said the balloon was conducting climate research.

A senior State Department official noted China’s statement of regret and said Blinken informed his Chinese counterpar­t Wang Yi of the decision on Friday morning. The official said China was told the incident was unacceptab­le and irresponsi­ble.

The balloon was first spotted earlier this week and had been loitering over Montana, home to interconti­nental-ballis

tic-missile silos, a senior Defense Department official initially said. The official said the balloon posed no intelligen­ce threat and such incursions have happened before.

The balloon has continued to move eastward and is now over the central U.S., Brigadier General Pat Ryder, a Pentagon spokesman, told reporters Friday. He said the balloon was maneuverab­le and had changed its course but declined to say whether it was now under China’s control. He said it currently posed no danger to civilians on the ground and it was above the level of air traffic, while shooting it down could pose dangers from its “debris field.”

Ryder said the balloon was expected to remain in U.S. airspace for a “few days.” He said its flight violated internatio­nal law.

But the Pentagon’s initial announceme­nt about the balloon on Thursday prompted an outcry from Republican lawmakers, with Rep. Mike Gallagher, the chairman of a new House committee meant to highlight the Chinese threat, saying the presence of the balloon “makes clear that the CCP’S recent diplomatic overtures do not represent a substantiv­e change in policy.”

Earlier in the day, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning cautioned the U.S. against “hyping” the incident. “We have no intention to violate other countries’ sovereignt­y and airspace,” Mao told a briefing, adding that she hoped “the relevant parties will handle the matter in a cool-headed way.”

Blinken’s trip was set to be the most senior U.S. visit to China since 2018. For the Biden administra­tion, it’s part of an effort to keep the China rivalry from getting worse. For leaders in Beijing, it’s meant to signal China’s emergence from post-coronaviru­s pandemic lockdown and a desire to reconnect with the rest of the world.

U.S. officials declined to answer several questions about the balloon, including the precise target of its surveillan­ce, its size or other specificat­ions.

It wasn’t the first time a suspected spy balloon had been spotted over U.S. territory. Unlike quick incursions in the past, though, this balloon is lingering over U.S. airspace, according to a person familiar with U.S. informatio­n on the situation.

While U.S. officials decided not to shoot it down immediatel­y, assets have been mobilized to bring the balloon down if a decision is made to do so later.

It entered U.S. airspace on Jan. 28, left it the next day and re-entered over North Idaho on Tuesday, the official said.

Actions were taken to block China’s ability to learn anything significan­t from the surveillan­ce, according to a White House official.

U.S. officials declined to say why it’s believed the balloon belonged to China, saying only that U.S. had high confidence in the assessment. The Chinese have for decades complained about the US surveillan­ce by ships and spy planes near its territory, leading to occasional confrontat­ions

Greg Falco, an aerospace expert at Johns Hopkins University, said spy balloons were no better than satellites at getting good imagery, but that it’s possible the Chinese “are using them to intercept” communicat­ions.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin convened a meeting of his top advisers while on a trip to the Philippine­s on Wednesday and informed Biden. The U.S. defense chief had been in the Philippine­s as part of a U.S. effort to rally allies and counter what officials believe is China’s increased assertiven­ess in the South China Sea and toward Taiwan.

Tensions between Washington and Beijing have been running high, with the Biden administra­tion becoming more explicit about its willingnes­s to defend Taiwan in the event of a conflict. Last week, an Air Force general told his staff he believed the U.S. and China would be at war by 2025. China, at the same time, has taken a softer tone, calling for an end to hostile rhetoric.

The Biden administra­tion also briefed staff for the “Gang of Eight,” a group including the chairs and ranking members of the House and Senate intelligen­ce committees, another official said.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP ?? Secretary of State Antony Blinken, shown Friday at the State Department in Washington, will not be traveling to China next week as planned. The Biden administra­tion postponed the trip after the U.S. military detected a Chinese surveillan­ce balloon in U.S. airspace, including over sensitive nuclear sites in Montana.
JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP Secretary of State Antony Blinken, shown Friday at the State Department in Washington, will not be traveling to China next week as planned. The Biden administra­tion postponed the trip after the U.S. military detected a Chinese surveillan­ce balloon in U.S. airspace, including over sensitive nuclear sites in Montana.
 ?? LARRY MAYER / THE BILLINGS GAZETTE VIA AP ?? A high altitude balloon f loats Wednesday over Billings, Mont. The huge, high-altitude Chinese balloon continued to sail across the U.S. on Friday, drawing severe Pentagon accusation­s of spying and sending excited or alarmed Americans outside with binoculars. Secretary of State Antony Blinken abruptly canceled a high-stakes Beijing trip aimed at easing U..s.-china tensions.
LARRY MAYER / THE BILLINGS GAZETTE VIA AP A high altitude balloon f loats Wednesday over Billings, Mont. The huge, high-altitude Chinese balloon continued to sail across the U.S. on Friday, drawing severe Pentagon accusation­s of spying and sending excited or alarmed Americans outside with binoculars. Secretary of State Antony Blinken abruptly canceled a high-stakes Beijing trip aimed at easing U..s.-china tensions.

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