Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Trudeau: US fighter shot down object over northern Canada

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Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Saturday that on his order a U.S. fighter jet shot down an unidentifi­ed object that was flying high over the Yukon, acting a day after the U.S. took similar action over Alaska.

North American Aerospace Defense Command, the combined U.S.-Canada organizati­on that provides shared defense of airspace over the two nations, said it had detected an object flying at a high altitude over northern Canada. It wasn't immediatel­y clear how high up it was flying or what it was.

Trudeau said he also spoke with President Joe Biden, who himself ordered the downing of an unidentifi­ed object over remote Alaska on Friday.

A spokesman, Maj. Olivier Gallant, said both Canadian and U.S. jets operating as part of NORAD had been deployed. The jets were scrambled and it was a U.S. jet that shot it down.

F-22 fighter jets have now downed three objects in the airspace above the U.S. and Canada over seven days, a stunning developmen­t in the skies that is raising questions on just what, exactly, is hovering overhead and who has sent them. At least one of the objects downed was believed to be a spy balloon from China, but the other two have not yet been identified. Trudeau said that Canadian forces would recover the wreckage for study.

The down came a day after White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said an object roughly the size of a small car was shot down in remote Alaska. Officials couldn't say if it contained any surveillan­ce equipment, where it came from or what purpose it had.

Kirby said it was shot down because it was flying at about 40,000 feet (13,000 meters) and posed a “reasonable threat” to the safety of civilian flights, not because of any knowledge that it was engaged in surveillan­ce.

According to U.S. Northern Command, recovery operations continued Saturday on sea ice near Deadhorse, Alaska.

In a statement, the Northern Command said there were no new details on what the object was. It said the Alaska Command and the Alaska National Guard, along with the FBI and local law enforcemen­t, were conducting search and recovery.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK — THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP, FILE ?? Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks in Vancouver, British Columbia, on Jan. 22.
DARRYL DYCK — THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP, FILE Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks in Vancouver, British Columbia, on Jan. 22.

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