Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP critical of balloon response

Many blame Biden for allowing its cross-country flight

- CHRIS MEGERIAN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Michael Balsamo and Tara Copp of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Republican lawmakers on Sunday accused China of deliberate­ly surveillin­g sensitive U.S. military sites with a suspected spy balloon and said the Biden administra­tion had given Beijing an intelligen­ce opening by not downing the balloon during its high-altitude drift through American airspace.

China, meanwhile, accused the U.S. of indiscrimi­nate use of force when the American military shot down the balloon. Vice Foreign Minister Xie Feng said he lodged a formal complaint with the U.S. Embassy on Sunday over the “U.S. attack on a Chinese civilian unmanned airship by military force.”

The balloon’s presence in the sky above the United States before a military jet shot it down over the Atlantic Ocean with a missile Saturday further strained U.S.-China ties. America’s top diplomat abruptly scrapped a trip to Beijing and China’s defense ministry said in a statement after the balloon fell into the waters off the Carolina coast that it “reserves the right to take necessary measures to deal with similar situations.”

“Clearly this was an attempt by China to gather informatio­n, to defeat our command and control of our sensitive missile defense and nuclear weapon sites,” said the chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, among the members of Congress on the Sunday news shows. “And that certainly is an urgency that this administra­tion does not recognize.”

U.S. defense and military officials said the balloon entered the U.S. air defense zone north of the Aleutian Islands on Jan. 28 and moved largely over land across Alaska and then into Canadian airspace in the Northwest Territorie­s on Monday. It crossed back into U.S. territory over northern Idaho on Tuesday, the day the White House said President Joe Biden was first briefed on it.

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said the full Senate will get a briefing next week on the balloon, including details about its surveillan­ce capabiliti­es, and that the administra­tion is considerin­g measures against the Chinese for “their brazen activities.” He said the GOP criticism was political and premature, and that the U.S. had “sent a clear message to China that this is not acceptable.”

Biden issued the shootdown order but had wanted it to happen earlier, on Wednesday. He was advised that the best time for the operation would be when it was over water, U.S. officials said. Military officials determined that bringing down the balloon over land from an altitude of 60,000 feet would pose an undue risk to people on the ground.

“The message they [ the Chinese] were trying to send is what they believe internally, and that is that the United States is a once great superpower that’s hollowed out, that’s in decline,” said Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, vice chairman of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. “And the message they’re trying to send the world is, ‘Look, these guys can’t even do anything about a balloon flying over U.S. airspace. How can you possibly count on them if something were to happen in the Indo-Pacific region?’”

By Wednesday the balloon was over Montana, home to Malmstrom Air Force Base, which has fields of nuclear missile silos.

The Chinese “didn’t go and look at the Grand Canyon,” Turner said. “They went and looked at our nuclear weapon sites and the missile defense sites throughout the country.”

On Thursday the Pentagon publicly exposed the balloon, and after that, “China maneuvered the balloon to leave the U.S.,” Schumer told reporters Sunday. A U.S. official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity confirmed that the balloon changed course at that point.

That it could be maneuvered ran counter to China’s contention that the balloon — claimed to be a civilian airship used mainly for meteorolog­ical research — had limited “self-steering” capabiliti­es and had “deviated far from its planned course” because of winds.

“This was not an accident. This was deliberate. It was intelligen­ce, you know?” said retired Adm. Mike Mullen, a former Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman.

“We should have shot this balloon down over the Aleutians instead of letting it float across middle America on its merry way,” Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., who sits on the Intelligen­ce Committee, said on “Fox News Sunday.” “The idea that we were going to let this go all across America, a spy balloon complete its spy mission, before we shot it down, I’m afraid is an embarrassm­ent to the United States, not an embarrassm­ent to the Chinese.”

To Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., who leads a new House committee on China, the message conveyed by Beijing is “look what we can do to you and get away with. Your corporatio­ns, your career politician­s, they will come crawling back.”

Turner was on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Rubio was on ABC’s “This Week” and CNN’s “State of the Union,” Mullen was on ABC and Gallagher appeared on Fox News Channel’s “Sunday Morning Futures.”

 ?? (AP/Chad Fish) ?? A large balloon drifts above the Atlantic Ocean on Saturday, just off the coast of South Carolina, with a fighter jet and its contrail seen below it.
(AP/Chad Fish) A large balloon drifts above the Atlantic Ocean on Saturday, just off the coast of South Carolina, with a fighter jet and its contrail seen below it.

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