This Chinese spy balloon fiasco could have been
avoided—at least, that’s the feeling, and you don’t need a security
clearance to have that assumption. We have the capability to track these
devices; we’ve been on pins and needles regarding missile launches
since the Cold War. We never saw this balloon coming. It’s a
balloon—one that measured three bus lengths and drifted at high
altitudes, but a balloon, nonetheless. China regretted this spy balloon
which hovered over areas where we house nuclear missiles. Montana is
where passengers on a commercial airliner reportedly spotted this
Beijing bag of tricks launched from Central China.
China’s reaction to the US was as expected: don’t overreact because
this balloon drifted off course. For once, Joe Biden made the right call
by wanting to shoot it down—the Pentagon advised against it. This spy
balloon drifted with impunity across American skies for days before being shot down yesterday. And Beijing was none too pleased (via NBC News):
The
U.S. downed the Chinese surveillance balloon off the Carolina coast on
Saturday, a U.S. official said, setting off a tense exchange between
both nations.
An F-22 raptor with a single missile
shot the balloon down at 2:39 p.m., according to a senior defense
official. It was between 60,000 to 65,000 feet in the air when it was
downed.
The action came a couple of hours after
President Joe Biden responded to a reporter who asked whether the U.S.
would shoot down the balloon. “We’re gonna take care of it,” Biden said,
in his first public remarks about the balloon.
In
remarks to reporters after the balloon was shot down, Biden said he made
the order to the Pentagon after he was briefed on Wednesday.
[…]
The
U.S. and China exchanged strong words after the balloon was downed,
with China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressing in a statement its
"strong dissatisfaction and protest over the use of force" by the U.S.
“The
Chinese side had clearly requested the U.S. side to handle the
situation properly in a calm, professional and restrained manner,” the
statement said, adding that the U.S. was an “obvious over-reaction and a
serious violation of international customary practice.”
“The
Chinese side will resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and
interests of the companies concerned, while reserving the right to make
further necessary responses,” the statement said.
The reasoning behind not shooting it down upon discovery was the fear
that falling debris could kill civilians. The Biden administration’s
initial response ranged from a shambles to snippy, as people wondered
how the Pentagon, which oversees the largest defense budget in the
world, was afraid of a balloon.
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