The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

U.S. considerin­g plan to down Chinese balloon over Atlantic

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WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is considerin­g a plan to shoot down a large Chinese balloon suspected of conducting surveillan­ce on the U.S. military, by bringing it down once it is above the Atlantic Ocean where the remnants could potentiall­y be recovered, according to four U.S. officials.

The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said it was unclear whether a final decision had been made by President Joe Biden. In a brief remark Saturday in response to a reporter's question about the balloon, Biden said: “We're going to take care of it.”

The balloon was spotted Saturday morning over South Carolina as it approached the Atlantic coast.

Biden had been inclined to down the balloon over land when he was first briefed on it on Tuesday, but Pentagon officials advised against it, warning that the potential risk to people on the ground outweighed the assessment of potential Chinese intelligen­ce gains.

The public disclosure of the balloon this week prompted the cancellati­on of a visit by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to Beijing scheduled for Sunday for talks aimed at reducing U.S.-China tensions. The Chinese government on Saturday sought to play down the cancellati­on.

“In actuality, the U.S. and China have never announced any visit, the U.S. making any such announceme­nt is their own business, and we respect that,” China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement Saturday morning.

China has continued to claim that the balloon was merely a weather research “airship” that had been blown off course. The Pentagon rejected that out of hand — as well as China's contention that it was not being used for surveillan­ce and had only limited navigation­al ability.

The balloon was spotted over Montana, which is home to one of America's three nuclear missile silo fields at Malmstrom Air Force Base.

Meanwhile, people with binoculars and telephoto lenses tried to find the “spy balloon” in the sky as it headed southeastw­ard over Kansas and Missouri at 60,000 feet.

The Pentagon also acknowledg­ed reports of a second balloon flying over Latin America. “We now assess it is another Chinese surveillan­ce balloon,” Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder, Pentagon press secretary, said in a statement.

China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediatel­y respond to a question about the second balloon.

Blinken, who had been due to depart Washington for Beijing late Friday, said he had told senior Chinese diplomat Wang Yi in a phone call that sending the balloon over the U.S. was “an irresponsi­ble act and that (China's) decision to take this action on the eve of my visit is detrimenta­l to the substantiv­e discussion­s that we were prepared to have.”

Uncensored reactions on the Chinese internet mirrored the official government stance that the U.S. was hyping the situation.

Many users made jokes about the balloon. Some said that since the U.S. had put restrictio­ns on the technology that China is able to buy to weaken the Chinese tech industry, they couldn't control the balloon.

Still others used it as a chance to poke fun at U.S. defenses, saying it couldn't even defend against a balloon, and nationalis­t influencer­s leapt to use the news to mock the U.S.

“The U.S. is hyping this as a national security threat posed by China to the U.S. This type of military threat, in actuality, we haven't done this. And compared with the U.S. military threat normally aimed at us, can you say it's just little? Their surveillan­ce planes, their submarines, their naval ships are all coming near our borders,” Chinese military expert Chen Haoyang of the Taihe Institute said on Phoenix TV, one of the major national TV outlets.

China has denied any claims of spying and said it is a civilian-use balloon intended for meteorolog­y research.

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