Texarkana Gazette

China calls U.S. House resolution ‘political manipulati­on’

- DAKE KANG AND HUIZHONG WU

BEIJING — China on Friday dismissed a U.S. House of Representa­tives resolution condemning Beijing over a suspected Chinese spy balloon shot down above U.S. waters as “purely political manipulati­on and hyping up.”

“China is strongly dissatisfi­ed with this and firmly opposes it,” Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Mao Ning told reporters at a daily briefing.

“The resolution by the U.S. Congress was purely political manipulati­on and hyping up,” Mao said.

The resolution, which passed unanimousl­y on Thursday, condemned China for a “brazen violation” of U.S. sovereignt­y and efforts to “deceive the internatio­nal community through false claims about its intelligen­ce collection campaigns.”

Republican­s have criticized the Biden administra­tion for not acting sooner to shoot down the balloon, but both parties’ lawmakers came together on the vote, 419-0.

China insists the object was a civilian weather balloon that had been blown off course, but has not said whom it belonged to or offered other details.

Meanwhile, China’s Defense Ministry said it refused a call from U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin following the downing of the balloon because the U.S. had “not created the proper atmosphere” for dialogue and exchange.

The U.S. action “seriously violated internatio­nal norms and set a pernicious precedent,” ministry spokespers­on Tan Kefei said in a statement issued late Thursday.

“Given that this irresponsi­ble and seriously wrong approach by the U.S. did not create the proper atmosphere for dialogue and exchanges between the two militaries, China did not accept the U.S. proposal for a phone call between the two defense ministers,” Tan said.

China, Tan added, “reserves the right to use necessary means to deal with similar situations.”

After initially expressing “regret” over the incident, China’s rhetoric has hardened in recent days as the FBI gathers debris from the site of the downing in U.S. territoria­l waters off the coast of South Carolina and sends it to the FBI’s lab in Quantico, Virginia, for investigat­ion.

Beijing said the U.S. “overreacte­d” by shooting it down. The Foreign Ministry has labeled the action “irresponsi­ble” and calls U.S. claims that it was spying “part of the U.S. side’s informatio­n warfare against China.”

Austin had sought on Saturday to discuss the balloon issue with his Chinese counterpar­t, Wei Fenghe, but was refused, the Pentagon said.

In the wake of the incident, Secretary of State Antony Blinken canceled a planned trip to Beijing this week that some had hoped would help stabilize bilateral relations, which have tumbled to their lowest level in decades over trade, human rights, China’s threats against Taiwan and the Chinese military’s increasing assertiven­ess in the South China Sea.

The U.S. has flatly contradict­ed China’s version of events, saying that imagery of the balloon collected by American U-2 spy planes as

it crossed the country showed that it was “capable of conducting signals intelligen­ce collection” with multiple antennas and other equipment designed to upload sensitive informatio­n and solar panels to power them.

The U.S. says the balloon was part of a huge aerial surveillan­ce program that targeted more than 40 countries under the direction of the People’s Liberation Army. Similar balloons have sailed over five continents, according to the administra­tion.

A State Department official said the U.S. has confidence that the manufactur­er of the balloon has “a direct relationsh­ip with China’s military and is an approved vendor” of the army. The official cited an official PLA procuremen­t portal as evidence.

Publicly available records show several Chinese companies have been developing balloons for military use, with some openly touting their connection­s with the PLA, advertisin­g airships bristling with surveillan­ce and communicat­ions gear.

Such high-tech balloons are often far larger than the hot air balloons used for recreation­al purposes. The one shot down by the U.S. was 60 meters (200 feet) tall.

State-owned defense contractor China Electronic­s Technology Group boasted in 2021 that its JY400 balloon could be equipped with radar and equipment to eavesdrop and interfere with telecommun­ications.

“It can effectivel­y deal with threats from low-flying targets, cruise missiles and sea targets,” Anhui Daily said a report.

An email sent to the company bounced back because the inbox was full. A man who picked up the telephone at a number listed for it declined to answer questions and said email was the only way to send requests for comment.

Two balloon companies in the southern province of Hunan also tout military connection­s.

The Zhuzhou Rubber Research and Design Institute makes the rubber pouches that fill with helium, making balloons lighter than air, and works with the PLA, according to procuremen­t notices, job advertisem­ents and a now-deleted descriptio­n on its company website.

The deleted descriptio­n said it is one of only two weather balloon makers in China, and a “military rubber products research and production unit.”

 ?? (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbe­in) ?? Commuters wearing face masks walk across an intersecti­on near an electronic billboard for China’s armed forces during the morning rush hour Friday in Beijing.
(AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbe­in) Commuters wearing face masks walk across an intersecti­on near an electronic billboard for China’s armed forces during the morning rush hour Friday in Beijing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States