Monterey Herald

Chinese balloon: Cold War contest drifts into the open

- By David Ignatius

Fans of the classic 1964 black comedy “Dr. Strangelov­e” will remember a moment when the mad doctor warns the president about an impending “mineshaft gap” between the United States and the Soviets. The very survival of the nation suddenly seems to depend on these heretofore irrelevant holes in the ground.

And now we have fears of the “balloon gap.”

Two weeks ago, it would have been hard to find anyone, even at high levels of the U.S. government, who knew much about China's balloon-surveillan­ce program. But it turns out that China's effort has been underway for more than a decade. According to a declassifi­ed intelligen­ce report issued Thursday by the State Department, it involves a “fleet of balloons developed to conduct surveillan­ce operations” that have flown over 40 countries on five continents.

What's emerging, in an especially frantic and destabiliz­ing way, is a new front in a U.S.-Chinese confrontat­ion that is nearing Cold War dimensions. For more than a decade, space has been a domain for potential conflict, with Chinese and U.S. surveillan­ce and attack satellites girdling the globe. Now we see the Chinese racing to exploit the domain of “near space” in the upper atmosphere - and the United States (with little publicity) is rushing along behind.

Let's start exploring this balloon backstory by examining China's efforts to develop this technology. They've hardly kept it secret. A 2019 article by two Chinese law professors on “utilizatio­n of the near space” noted that operations in this zone, above 18 kilometers (or 59,005 feet) “represent the future of activities in the airspace.”

Balloon operations obviously make sense for the Chinese. The United States has military bases in Japan and elsewhere from which it can launch daily flights by P-8 and other surveillan­ce planes that fly perilously close to Chinese airspace. China doesn't have similar options.

The frequency of these American “Sensitive Reconnaiss­ance Operations,” or SROs, has increased sharply from about 250 a year a decade ago to several thousand annually, or three or four a day, a former intelligen­ce official told me. China wants to push back, and collect its own signals. Balloons are a way to both show the flag and collect intelligen­ce.

China has been seeking mastery of the space domain since its 2007 test of an antisatell­ite weapon. But this bid for space mastery has been confounded by the U.S.'s commercial satellite revolution. Elon Musk's SpaceLink has roughly 2,500 satellites in low Earth orbit to provide broadband internet; Amazon's Project Kuiper plans to launch about 3,000 of its own. Google's Project Loon, launched in 2011, envisioned at least 300 high-altitude balloons in a similar venture. Such commercial ventures by U.S. companies could offer useful surveillan­ce or attack platforms in a crisis. China may have feared that its high frontier was blocked.

China claims in its internal media that the Pentagon has aggressive plans to use high-altitude balloons, in projects such as “Thunder Cloud.”

It turns out the Chinese are right. Thunder Cloud was the name for the U.S. Army's September 2021 exercise in Norway to test its “Multidomai­n Operations” warfightin­g concept, following a similar test in the Pacific in 2018, according to Defense News.

The final challenge, given this history, is balloon diplomacy. So far, that has been disastrous.

China began the current poisonous round by sending its surveillan­ce balloon over the United States just as Secretary of State Antony Blinken was about to travel there for meetings to rebuild Sino-American dialogue. It was clear that Xi wanted the visit to take place, despite the balloon's discovery, when China issued a rare semiapolog­y for the overflight.

The PLA wasn't conducting a rogue operation, as some have imagined. The Chinese military doesn't do anything these days without Xi's broad approval. Instead, this seems likely to have been a situation where military officials didn't realize that an intelligen­ce operation could have disastrous political consequenc­es.

President Joe Biden, harassed by Republican critics, decided to shoot down the balloon. That was probably an inescapabl­e political decision, given the GOP furor, but it came at an unfortunat­e time. The impact was succinctly stated by China Vice Foreign Minister Xie Feng, slated to become Beijing's new ambassador to Washington: “What the U.S. has done has seriously impacted and damaged both sides' efforts and progress in stabilizin­g Sino-U.S. relations.”

Biden seemed to be trying to soften the diplomatic impact, saying of the balloon incident: “It's not a major breach. Look, the total amount of intelligen­ce gathering that's going on by every country around the world is overwhelmi­ng.”

But the reality is that the new Cold War between China and the United States is deepening, with growing military competitio­n in every domain - land, sea, air, space, and now, near space. Dr. Strangelov­e isn't yet in control, but he waits in the wings.

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