USA TODAY International Edition

Objects shot down possibly no threat

White House suggests benign origin, purpose

- Candy Woodall, Maureen Groppe and Joey Garrison

WASHINGTON – Three unidentified flying objects shot down from North American airspace could turn out to be balloons used for research or commercial purposes that posed no direct threat to the U. S., a White House spokesman said Tuesday.

“Given what we’ve been able to ascertain thus far, the intelligen­ce community is considerin­g as a leading explanatio­n that these could just be balloons tied to some commercial or benign purpose,” said spokesman John Kirby.

No one has come forward to claim responsibi­lity. And there are still a number of unanswered questions.

But Kirby said the U. S. hasn’t seen any indication that points directly to the objects being part of China’s spy balloon program, even though they were shot down about a week after the U. S. shot down a Chinese spy balloon off the Atlantic coast. He said the Pentagon has ruled out the possibilit­y that the objects were from the U. S. government.

Complicati­ng the search for more details, the U. S. has not yet retrieved debris from the objects shot down over Alaska, Canada’s Yukon territory and in U. S. airspace over Lake Huron because each is in remote areas with difficult conditions and two are in bodies of water.

“We’ll get them eventually but it’s going to take some time,” Army Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters Tuesday in Brussels.

Some remnants of the Chinese spy balloon have been retrieved from about 50 feet of ocean off the coast of South Carolina. The object shot down Sunday over Lake Huron is in hundreds of feet of water, he said.

One missile fired at that object

missed its mark and landed harmlessly. according to Milley.

Senators briefed on the incidents Tuesday said the threat level from the unidentified objects is low.

But Republican­s say the American people need to hear that from President Joe Biden.

“I mean, my phone is ringing off the wall, and we’ve got a president of the United States that’s not saying anything,” Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R- Ala., said after the briefing. “Get out there and tell the people we’re in good shape, we know what’s going on, and let’s go on with life.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D- N. Y., said the Biden administra­tion is being “very careful and very thoughtful.” Some of the informatio­n can’t be made public because it is classified or “on the edge of classified, and it’s difficult,” he said.

Multiple senators and Kirby confirmed Tuesday that officials haven’t been able to retrieve data from the last three objects that were shot down.

Idaho Sen. James Risch, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said at least one of the three objects had a payload.

What senators are saying about the spy balloons

Republican Sens. Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley said they didn’t learn much in the briefing.

“I get the feeling they don’t really know what in the world is going on,” Hawley said.

Biden should be addressing the nation and “laying out what they know,” said Hawley, who expressed frustratio­n that nobody from White House administra­tion was in the briefing.

Schumer said some of his Republican colleagues are being “premature” and “very political” in their views.

Other Republican­s, such as Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Thom Tillis of North Carolina, had a measured tone Tuesday.

Murkowski said she was “angry” last week about an incursion in American airspace, especially because her home state is the first line of defense to foreign adversarie­s China and Russia.

On Tuesday morning, she said she still has questions, but some may not be answered until data is retrieved.

“It’s pretty tough conditions up north right now, and they’re looking for a needle in a haystack – but it’s probably worse. It’s about 50 below up there right now,” she said of the temperatur­e in Alaska and over the border in the Canadian Yukon.

When asked if he approved of the Biden administra­tion’s decisions, Tillis said, “I think so” and expressed confidence that data retrieval from the spy balloon shot down over South Carolina would produce “very valuable informatio­n.”

“I think they’ve done a good job of getting our situationa­l awareness to where it is today and we had no situationa­l awareness a month ago,” he said after the briefing.

Congress has called for swift action from Biden, including fellow Democrats saying they want transparen­cy and consequenc­es for spying. Biden, meanwhile, is threading a delicate balance of trying to show strong leadership and strong diplomacy with a foreign adversary.

Kirby said Monday the administra­tion is being “as transparen­t as we can be.” He said Biden has directed his team to properly consult and brief members of Congress and state leaders. “We’re also doing what we can in the public sphere.”

Why weren’t the spy balloons spotted sooner?

Senators – and House members – have questioned why suspected Chinese spy balloons were in U. S. airspace during the Trump administra­tion but weren’t spotted until the Biden administra­tion was in office.

U. S. Northern Command and the North American Aerospace Defense Command, also known as NORAD, did not identify at least four Chinese balloons that entered U. S. airspace through Florida, Hawaii and Texas.

VanHerck, the NORAD commander, said not detecting those threats is “a domain awareness gap that we have to figure out.”

“This has been going on for years,” said Sen. John Kennedy, R- La. “We don’t really know what they are. We don’t even know if we’d caught all of them.”

Senators will get another classified briefing Wednesday afternoon on overall threats from China.

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