Las Vegas Review-Journal

Balloon popped for senators trying to humiliate Biden

- Joel Mathis Joel Mathis is a columnist for The Kansas City (Mo.) Star.

In ancient times, we’re told, humans sometimes responded to strange sights in the sky — an eclipse, say, or a comet — with terror and hysterics and prediction­s of the end of the world, with wailing and gnashing of teeth. It was all a bit much, and all very dramatic, but they can be forgiven for their excesses. After all, they didn’t know any better.

What’s the excuse for elected Republican­s in Kansas and Missouri?

The now-notorious Chinese balloon appeared in the skies over the region last week, floating peacefully through the area before the Air Force shot it down off the coast of South Carolina. To listen to our leaders, though, you’d have thought the sky was falling.

They took to social media in a madcap scramble to top each other over who could be angrier, who could heap more blame on China and President Joe Biden, who could show the most resolve to meet the threat posed by the giant gasbag in the air.

It was all very silly.

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-MO., was his usual demagogic self, accusing the Biden administra­tion of “total capitulati­on” to China, and firing off an allcaps tweet to “SHOOT IT DOWN.”

Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-MO., went on Fox News to demand an investigat­ion. “The idea that Communist China has a spy balloon headed towards Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri right now — the home of the Stealth Bomber — is absolutely unbelievab­le,” he tweeted. “No American should accept this. I don’t.”

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-kan., proposed exacerbati­ng tensions with China. “Now that the President has postponed Secretary Blinken’s trip to China he should send him to Taipei instead,” he wrote. That’s the capital of Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province, and where thenhouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s trip in August raised Pacific tensions to a boiling point.

Even Sen. Jerry Moran, R-kan. — usually among the more level-headed of the group — got in on the act, demanding Pentagon answers “on what action is being taken to protect Kansans & the US from this threat.” Threat? Guys, it was a balloon. Barring any contrary evidence, it seems likely that the balloon’s purpose was surveillan­ce. That’s not of zero concern, which is why the Pentagon was tracking it, but let’s put that mission in context: The U.S. and China spy on each other all the time. The Atlantic’s David Frum points out that the Chinese have more than 500 satellites orbiting the planet, many of them taking pictures of places such as Whiteman. America most assuredly has eyes on Chinese military installati­ons as well. This is how superpower­s do business.

The balloon was novel, yes, in that it flew much lower than those satellites and could be easily seen with the naked eye. But the biggest immediate “threat” it posed was that an overzealou­s reaction — shooting it down while it passed overland — would bring it down on their heads.

U.S. senators should know all of that. They could have helped Americans by responding with measured concern. Instead, they chose to help create a general sense of panic.

And that’s a problem.

This is not the last U.s.-china confrontat­ion. American officials announced last week that the military is building new bases in the Philippine­s, a Pacific citadel for U.S. forces in case war comes. But it would be much better if that war is never fought. Maintainin­g peace, however troubled, will require calm nerves and steady hands.

We need John F. Kennedy in the Cuban missile crisis. We don’t need Chicken Littles.

The hope here is that Balloongat­e 2023 was so obviously a calorie-free drama that GOP leaders decided they could score a few political points against Biden — or buff their own conservati­ve credential­s — without any real harm coming to the country. Maybe they’ll do better in a real crisis.

This time? All they had to offer was a lot of hot air.

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