The Guardian (USA)

Chinese balloon was ‘clearly’ for spying, says US

- Julian Borger in Washington

The Chinese balloon that flew over North America for more than a week before being shot down over the Atlantic was carrying equipment capable of intercepti­ng and geolocatin­g communicat­ions, the US government has claimed.

A senior state department official said on Thursday that equipment was identified by a U-2 spy plane sent up to scrutinise the balloon.

“The high-altitude balloon’s equipment was clearly for intelligen­ce surveillan­ce and inconsiste­nt with the equipment onboard weather balloons,” the official said. “It had multiple antennas to include an array likely capable of collecting and geolocatin­g communicat­ions.

“It was equipped with solar panels large enough to produce the requisite power to operate multiple active intelligen­ce collection sensors.”

China has used such balloons to collect intelligen­ce over 40 countries on five continents, the US claims.

The Pentagon has so far insisted that despite carrying this equipment, the balloon did not give China an intelligen­ce collection capability above what it already has via satellite and other means.

Republican­s have criticised the Biden administra­tion for not shooting the balloon down before it crossed the country. The Pentagon has said it did not present a serious threat and that it could not be shot down over land for fear of causing casualties on the ground.

Biden said on Thursday that he did not regret not shooting down the balloon sooner.

“It’s not a major breach,” Biden said. “It’s a violation of internatio­nal law. It’s our airspace. And once it comes into our space, we can do what we want with it.”

He said US military officials were worried that by shooting it down over land, the balloon and its parts could drop into a populated area.

“This thing was gigantic. What happened if it came down and hit a school in a rural area? So I told them as soon as they could shoot it down, shoot it down. They made a wise decision.” he said.

Officials from the Pentagon, state department and US intelligen­ce briefed members of Congress behind closed doors on Thursday. According to CNN, they said it had been assessed that little new intelligen­ce was gleaned by the balloon operation because the Chinese appeared to stop transmitti­ng informatio­n once the US discovered its presence, and that measures were taken to block the balloon’s collection capabiliti­es.

The assistant secretary of defence for Indo-Pacific security affairs, Ely Ratner, said the Pentagon had made efforts to contact officials in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) through military channels, but without success.

“We continue to have an outstretch­ed hand, including immediatel­y following the downing of the balloon,” Ratner told the Senate. “Unfortunat­ely, to date, the PLA is not answering that call.”

The administra­tion is contemplat­ing sanctions against those involved, potentiall­y including the balloon’s manufactur­er, which, according to the state department, is an “approved vendor” to the PLA.

“We will also look at broader efforts to expose and address the PRC’s [People’s Republic of China’s] larger surveillan­ce activities that pose a threat to our national security, and to our allies and partners,” the department said.

The US military does not have the authority to collect intelligen­ce within the US, so a special dispensati­on was granted to conduct a counter-surveillan­ce operation for the U-2 plane.

A salvage operation is under way off the coast of South Carolina, but FBI officials said very little of the balloon’s equipment payload had so far been recovered. Those fragments that have been recovered are being cleaned of salt and saltwater, the officials told reporters.

The deputy secretary of state, Wendy Sherman, said on Thursday morning that the Biden administra­tion was reviewing its policy towards China and would be investing diplomatic­ally in the Pacific to counter China’s “growing coercion” in Asia.

The US will reopen a diplomatic presence in Solomon Islands and intends to send diplomats and Peace Corps volunteers back to Tonga and Kiribati.

“It is true that our way of life, our democracy, our belief in our values, in the rules-based internatio­nal order, is being challenged. And we have to meet that challenge,” Sherman told the Senate foreign relations committee.

 ?? ?? The US says it is still recovering parts of the balloon from the sea off South Carolina. Photograph: PETTY OFFICER 1ST CLASS TYLER TH/ US NAVY/AFP/Getty
The US says it is still recovering parts of the balloon from the sea off South Carolina. Photograph: PETTY OFFICER 1ST CLASS TYLER TH/ US NAVY/AFP/Getty

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