BREAKING NEWS: Fighter jet shoots down China spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina after Biden vowed to 'take care of it' and the FAA closed airspace and three airports

  • A missile burst the balloon at 2.38pm and separated its payload - carrying its cameras - sending it plummeting towards the ocean off Myrtle Beach
  • Footage showed a fighter jet screaming towards the spy aircraft before firing a missile which shredded the balloon. It then dropped straight down
  • The Biden administration confirmed the shoot-down order around 2pm

Footage showed a fighter jet screaming towards the spy aircraft before firing a missile which shredded the balloon. The balloon and the payload then dropped straight down as stunned locals watched from the coast.

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Watch this video:

There’s Something Strange About The Chinese Spy Balloon

Was this Chinese spy balloon a test run for an EMP detonation?

In this video, we examine some of the histories of nuclear weapon-equipped balloons and the potential consequences of a balloon-launched EMP event.

People in Myrtle beach felt there houses shake from a sonic boom, some thought a plane had hit their house. Others reported that they didnt hear the jets flying over head, just the booms.

Why would you need a missle to take down a baloon?

Video in link above:

Theres Something Strange About The Chinese Spy Balloon

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## China threatens 'resolute' action as US warned to brace for 'further provocations' after spy balloon was shot down off the coast of South Carolina sparking race to salvage secret payload
US braces for Beijing's response over spy balloon

  • Beijing warned of 'responses' to come after the U.S. shot down a Chinese spy balloon on Saturday that hovered over nuclear silos in Montana
  • Defense experts said China could try to interfere in the recovery of the surveillance payload off the coast of South Carolina
  • Beijing could try to use the incident as a way to justify 'incursions into Taiwanese airspace', a military expert said

China is threatening to respond with 'resolute action' which American defense experts say could result in 'further provocations' after the U.S. finally shot down their spy balloon.

Beijing's Foreign Ministry last night slammed the move as a 'clear overreaction and a serious violation of international practice.'

An F-22 Raptor fighter jet took down the balloon with a single AIM-9X sidewinder missile at 2.38pm on Saturday, off the coast of South Carolina.

Beijing issued a chilling statement saying it 'reserves the right to make further responses if necessary.'

'The Chinese side has, after verification, repeatedly informed the U.S. side of the civilian nature of the airship and conveyed that its entry into the U.S. due to force majeure was totally unexpected,' the Ministry said.

Former Trump administration Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Dr. James Anderson (pictured) warned that Beijing could deploy vessels to interfere with America's retrieval of the surveillance balloon's payload

'The Chinese side has clearly asked the U.S. side to properly handle the matter in a calm, professional and restrained manner,' it added.

'The spokesperson of the U.S. Department of Defense also noted that the balloon does not present a military or physical threat to people on the ground.

'Under such circumstances, the U.S. use of force is a clear overreaction and a serious violation of international practice.

'China will resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of the company concerned, and reserves the right to make further responses if necessary.'

With the U.S. bracing for China's next move, Dr. James Anderson, a former Trump administration Defense official, told Fox News Beijing 'will continue to claim that the United States 'overreacted' in shooting down the spy balloon.'

'Beijing may also engage in further provocations against U.S. interests in the days ahead,' Anderson warned, suggesting China could interfere with the recovery of the debris and its surveillance payload.

'It is possible, though one would certainly hope unlikely, that in the coming days one or more PLA-directed maritime vessels may seek to interfere with the recovery effort of the balloon debris located within U.S. territorial waters,' he told Fox.

'If this were to happen, U.S. warships would be fully justified in providing any such intruders with one-way tickets to the bottom of the ocean.'

As the Navy and Coast Guard work to secure a perimeter around the downed craft, it also emerged overnight that three other Chinese spy balloons had entered U.S. airspace during the Trump administration but the public was never informed and the balloons were never shot down.

https://twitter.com/thenewarea51/status/1622038650425933824?ref_src=twsrc^tfw|twcamp^tweetembed|twterm^1622038650425933824|twgr^6ae9c4b02f1457fd3b8ca13a17af8e6d5005d0a5|twcon^s1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.dailymail.co.uk%2Fnews%2Farticle-11714735%2FUS-braces-Beijings-response-experts-warn-attempt-shift-blame-spy-balloon.html

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They will claim that it was all completely innocent. That it was a weather balloon,' Klinck told Fox.

'They'll reiterate the statements they've made before. But in essence, as is the norm for them, they'll launch counteraccusations and deny that they were in the wrong.

'It is the norm for them to try to portray themselves as the innocent actor abiding by international law and international standards of conduct, when in fact it's the exact opposite,' he added.

Klink also warned that China could use the incident to try and justify 'incursions into Taiwanese airspace.'

A senior military advisor told Fox News that the debris field of the downed balloon was about seven-miles wide, with the depth of the waters estimated at 47 feet.

While multiple Navy and Coast Guard vessels are in the area establishing a security and search perimeter, the senior advisor said an official salvage vessel won't arrive until a couple of days.

There is currently no timeline on the recovery of the balloon from the Atlantic Ocean, but officials estimated that it would be done in a short time.

When recovered, the balloon debris will be analyzed in Quantico, Virginia, home of the FBI headquarters.

China has long-claimed that the surveillance balloon was actually a civilian craft that had floated off course.

Their state-owned news outlet, The Xinhua News Agency, accused the U.S. of using the balloon incident as a way to create 'hype' over a Chinese threat.

US braces for Beijing's response over spy balloon US braces for Beijing's response as experts warn they will attempt to shift blame for spy balloon | Daily Mail Online

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US shoots down another high-altitude ‘object’ that was the ‘size of a small car’ over Alaska

The US shot down another high-altitude “object” over the waters off Alaska on Friday afternoon – six days after a fighter jet took out a Chinese spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina – an operation President Biden deemed “a success.”

The latest object, which was detected within the past 24 hours, was downed on Biden’s orders at 1:45 p.m., Pentagon spokesman Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said.

The US has not yet determined the object’s “capabilities, purpose or origin,” Ryder said. Officials hope to answer those questions after they recover and analyze it

The object was first picked up on ground radar Thursday, prompting the military to scramble fighter jets to observe it from the air, Ryder said. Pilots determined the object was unmanned, and later used an F-22 to shoot it down after the president gave the go-ahead.

At 40,000 feet, the object “posed a reasonable threat to the safety of civilian flight,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters during a White House briefing. Unlike the first device, the object intercepted Friday didn’t appear to have the same “maneuverable capability” and was moving “virtually at the whim of the wind.”

“It was much, much smaller than the spy balloon that we took down last Saturday,” he said. “The way it was described to me was roughly the size of a small car, as opposed to a payload that was like two or three buses sized … no significant payload, if you will.”

It isn’t clear yet if the object had surveillance capabilities, Kirby said. Though the surveillance balloon last week came from China, the US has not contacted Beijing to ask if the new object was theirs.

“We’re calling this an object, because that’s the best description we have right now. We do not know who owns it,” the NSC spokesman said. “… We do expect to be able to recover the debris since it fell not only within our territorial space but on what we believe is frozen water.”

However, Ryder declined to rule out that the object could be a balloon, saying he did not want to “characterize” it until it is recovered and analyzed.

While it took a full week for the first spy balloon to be identified, publicized and taken down, officials took less than a day to shoot the new object out of the sky.

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The object was taken down on President Biden’s orders on Friday afternoon.

At an Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense hearing Thursday, Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) raged against the call not to take down the spy balloon when it was first spotted approaching her home state on Jan. 28.

“As an Alaskan, I am so angry. I want to use other words, but I’m not going to,” she said. “If you’re going to have Russia coming at you, if you’re going to have China coming at you, we know exactly how they come: They come up and they go over Alaska.”

Ryder denied that congressional criticism influenced the swift decision regarding the latest object, instead reiterating that its lower altitude posed a greater risk to air traffic than the spy balloon, which flew at about 60,000 feet – roughly double that of the average jetliner.

China Can Fire Hypersonic Weapons, Conduct EMP Strikes With High-Altitude Balloons; Had Conducted Tests Back In 2017-18

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https://twitter.com/dafengcao/status/1043036417843056641?s=20&t=zpP8iQh3HhiLaAppTNrQ9w

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Some details, the three scale models in this test were developed by Institute of Mechanics, CAS. named D18-3S, D18-1S & D18-2S from left to right in 1st photo. Apparently, D18-3S/1S with a dimension of 2m×1.5m are set as comparisons in a conventional configuration.

From the twitter thread:

Replying to

@13_Thermidor

and

@dafengcao

Things dropped from extreme height will hit a terminal velocity quickly. Aerodynamics and density of material play into how fast they can go just via gravity. Tungsten from 60k is very very fast and hits with energy you’d think had payload, but it’s the sheer speeds...
an extremely efficient way of not using any propellant to allow the warhead to hit terminal velocity. Once V is hit, rocket ignites to carry it to the target at hypervelocity.

This is so-called "the Rod from God", a suborbital strike. It could hit with the force of a nuclear weapon — with no fallout.

The Chinese spy balloon, recently shot down by the US military, has captured the headlines in recent weeks, with other countries like India, Japan, and Taiwan currently looking into the possibility that similar Chinese balloons may have also violated their airspace in the past.

Even more concerning is that China could also use such balloons to deploy hypersonic weapons.

In 2018, Chinese state-owned television CCTV broadcast footage of a high-altitude balloon, not dissimilar from the one that traversed over the US and Canada last week, dropping what appeared to be hypersonic weapons.

The video showed a high-altitude balloon carrying three wedge-shaped payloads, which looked like hypersonic glide vehicles (HGVs), up to a certain height and then dropping them as part of a weapons test.

The Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported that the balloon-dropped HGVs were part of an effort to develop precision warheads for hypersonic weapons, which would give the Chinese military an “unstoppable nuclear-capable weapon.”

Screenshots from this Douyin short video. pic.twitter.com/XvhnzMhhY7

— dafeng cao (@dafengcao) September 21, 2018

The wedge-shaped payloads appeared to resemble the designs closely revealed in 2017 by CCTV, believed to be associated with China’s under-development DF-ZF HGV, which became operational in October 2019.

China just showed its hypersonic-BGV in a vid on 08 Oct. Probably a test design model, but AFAIK this is first pics of an actual object 1/ pic.twitter.com/EXIMHkXTEA

— Raymond Wang :red_gift_envelope: (@soraywang) November 5, 2017

The DF-ZF HGV can travel between Mach 5 and 10 and perform evasive maneuvers to tackle the enemy defenses.

It can be carried by China’s Dong Feng-17 (DF-17) medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM), which can travel at a speed of Mach 5-10 and carry conventional or nuclear weapons. It has a range of 1,800-2,500km and a launch weight of 15,000kgs.

Reports also suggest that the HGVs dropped by the balloon in the footage may have contributed to the development of the hypersonic glide vehicle (HGV) secretly tested by China in July 2021, which sparked widespread concern and panic among the US military’s brass.

The glide vehicle traveled around 24,800 miles (39,911 km) in space before re-entering the atmosphere and striking the ground target, according to a US Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) report.

The DIA report reads that the flight test lasted more than 100 minutes, making it “the greatest distance covered and longest flight time of any Chinese land-attack weapons system to date.”

Then-Vice Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. John Hyten said that the HGV, which was secretly tested, appeared to be intended for a “first-use” nuclear strike against the United States.

“They look like a first-use weapon,” Hyten said

Also, the US Defense Department (DoD) is investing millions of dollars into high-altitude balloons capable of flying at altitudes of 60,000 – 90,000 feet, which it intends to use for surveillance and, eventually, maybe even for tracking hypersonic weapons of adversaries.

The DoD is interested in incorporating high-altitude balloons and commercial satellites in the kill chain, which could be through a number of different ways, such as using them as communication and datalink nodes, ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, & Reconnaissance) assets, etc.

High-altitude balloons flying in the stratosphere, which begins at altitudes ranging from 23,000 to 66,000 feet, that could deploy swarms of drones, including loitering munitions, over hostile territory.

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US Navy vessel found beached in South Carolina

https://katu.com/amp/news/nation-world/us-navy-vessel-found-beached-in-south-carolina-ship-ocean-myrtle-beach-cherry-grove-china-chinese-spy-balloon-military-exercises

:point_up_2: ODD

5G visions include drones, robots, high-altitude balloons

While providing comments on how the FCC should treat the use of spectrum bands above 24 GHz, interested parties also shared their visions for 5G--everything from M2M to robots and drones.

Clearly, 5G services will need to accommodate the Internet of Things (IoT), Samsung noted in its 94-page filing. "Samsung believes that 5G systems will, among other things, enable the 'Internet of Things' and revolutionize the way mobile services are integrated into daily life," the company said.

Samsung also referenced President Obama's recent speech affirming his administration's commitment to higher-speed broadband, noting that the development of mobile broadband services at gigabit speeds can help to meet those objectives.

To be sure, 5G networks will be fundamentally different from their predecessors, relying on higher frequencies, greater bandwidth and higher-density cell deployments, the company went on to say.

Not surprisingly, Google said the high-frequency bands are well-suited for supporting experimentation and innovative uses and could be useful for a variety of nontraditional uses that don't already use reserved spectrum. It also referenced applications such as the type of balloons its Project Loon uses.

"The bands could, for example, be useful for offering broadband access via airborne platforms such as high-altitude balloons or unmanned aerial vehicles, where deployment of terrestrial networks is uneconomic," Google told the FCC. "The bands are also likely to be useful for the continued development of new terrestrial technologies. For instance, some machine-to-machine applications will rely on this band for backhaul, hub-to-device, or device-to-device communications. The Wi-Fi Alliance has already developed the 802.11ad (Wi-Gig) standard to support backhaul transmissions in the 60 GHz band."

China Isn’t the Only Problem With 5G

The network has plenty of other security weaknesses, including ones the United States doesn’t want to fix since they help its own surveillance efforts.

US aircraft shoots down new airborne object over Canada

Another unidentified object has been shot down over North American airspace, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has confirmed.

He said the latest object "violated Canadian airspace" and was shot down over Yukon in north west Canada.

Both Canadian and US aircraft were scrambled to track down the object which Trudeau says was taken out by a US F-22.

Trudeau says he gave the order and that he spoke with US President Joe Biden.

"Canadian forces will now recover and analyse the wreckage of the object," he wrote on Twitter.

He thanked the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) which earlier said it had been monitoring "a high-altitude airborne object" over northern Canada. NORAD carries out air defence for the US and Canada.

It is not clear what the object is.

But, its appearance over North America comes only days after a suspected Chinese spy balloon was shot down after violating American and Canadian airspace.

On Friday another object was shot down over Alaska at the orders of US President Biden.

In a short statement, the military said US troops, including from the Alaska National Guard, were still conducting search and recovery activities on sea ice for Friday's object.

It said it had no further details about the object's capabilities, purpose or origin but confirmed the FBI is helping with the recovery near the Alaskan town of Deadhorse.

"Arctic weather conditions, including wind chill, snow, and limited daylight, are a factor in this operation, and personnel will adjust recovery operations to maintain safety," it added - and the rescue operation will continue as weather permits.

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Terrifying: Chinese ‘spy balloons’ seen as dry run for nuclear EMP attack

Monday, February 06, 2023 by: JD Heyes


(Natural News) The recent sightings of Chinese “spy” balloons over the United States could be test runs by Beijing for a sneak attack on America using small nuclear explosions that set off massive power outages due to electromagnetic pulse bursts.

“High-altitude balloons, such as the one China has floated over mountain state military bases this week, are considered a key ‘delivery platform’ for secret nuclear strikes on America’s electric grid, according to intelligence officials,” the Washington Examiner reported. “Spy balloons, used by Japan to drop bombs during World War II, are now far more sophisticated, can fly at up to 200,000 feet, evade detection, and can carry a small nuclear bomb that, if exploded in the atmosphere, would shut down the grid and wipe out electronics in a many-state-wide area.”

The outlet reported further that a balloon-launched EMP attack threat was initially mentioned by a congressional commission and within the U.S. military a number of years ago. The American Leadership & Policy Foundation noted in a 2015 report written by Air Force Maj. David Stuckenberg, a top EMP expert, that such balloons are a major national security threat because of what they are capable of carrying.

The report, titled “Novel High-altitude Delivery Platforms for Weapons of Mass Destruction/Weapons of Mass Effect,” notes:

Can a state, pseudo-state or non-state actor(s) deliver Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)/Weapons of Mass Effect (WME) to strategically impact America’s infrastructure absent employment of Inter-continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM), SubmarineLaunched Ballistic Missiles (SBLM), or other conventional means? The answer is “yes.” Thus, the feasibility of using novel delivery platforms to achieve offensive capabilities against the United States should be examined and understood by the emergency management and national security communities.

Terrifying: Chinese ‘spy balloons’ seen as dry run for nuclear EMP attack

Monday, February 06, 2023 by: JD Heyes
Tags: chaos, China, Collapse, Dangerous, electromagnetic pulse, EMP, EMP attack, EMP event, infrastructure, national security, nuclear attack, nuclear war, nuclear weapon, power grid, spy balloon, Spygate, terrorism, WWIII

This article may contain statements that reflect the opinion of the author

(https://www.naturalnews.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/91/2023/02/Powerlines-sunset-energy.jpg)

(Natural News) The recent sightings of Chinese “spy” balloons over the United States could be test runs by Beijing for a sneak attack on America using small nuclear explosions that set off massive power outages due to electromagnetic pulse bursts.

“High-altitude balloons, such as the one China has floated over mountain state military bases this week, are considered a key ‘delivery platform’ for secret nuclear strikes on America’s electric grid, according to intelligence officials,” the Washington Examiner reported. “Spy balloons, used by Japan to drop bombs during World War II, are now far more sophisticated, can fly at up to 200,000 feet, evade detection, and can carry a small nuclear bomb that, if exploded in the atmosphere, would shut down the grid and wipe out electronics in a many-state-wide area.”

The outlet reported further that a balloon-launched EMP attack threat was initially mentioned by a congressional commission and within the U.S. military a number of years ago. The American Leadership & Policy Foundation noted in a 2015 report written by Air Force Maj. David Stuckenberg, a top EMP expert, that such balloons are a major national security threat because of what they are capable of carrying.

The report, titled “Novel High-altitude Delivery Platforms for Weapons of Mass Destruction/Weapons of Mass Effect,” notes:

Can a state, pseudo-state or non-state actor(s) deliver Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)/Weapons of Mass Effect (WME) to strategically impact America’s infrastructure absent employment of Inter-continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM), SubmarineLaunched Ballistic Missiles (SBLM), or other conventional means? The answer is “yes.” Thus, the feasibility of using novel delivery platforms to achieve offensive capabilities against the United States should be examined and understood by the emergency management and national security communities.

“While legacy and derivative systems such as Russia’s (oceanic multi-purpose Status-6 system) nuclear torpedo continue to present strategic threats to the U.S., their proliferation has proven somewhat predictable over time,” the report continued. “However, the rise of global terrorism has created a new dimension of risk to the U.S. in particular – one that presents itself in a chaotic, innovative and ill-defined manner.

“Consequently, planners should begin addressing novel strategic threats by understanding what can be done rather than what has been done. Such an approach is critically important to protecting America’s society and critical infrastructure,” it added.

“Using a balloon as a WMD/WME platform could provide adversaries with a pallet of altitudes and payload options with which to maximize offensive effects against the U.S.,” Stuckenberg wrote. “A high altitude balloon could be designed, created, and launched in a matter of months. There is nothing to prevent several hundred pounds of weapons material from being delivered to altitude.”

In a short Friday interview with the Examiner, Stuckenberg said: “China’s recent balloon flyover of the United States is clearly a provocative and aggressive act. It was most likely a type of dry run meant to send a strategic message to the USA. We must not take this for granted.”

Democratic and Republican lawmakers are both demanding that the Biden regime explain why the balloon was allowed to enter U.S. airspace in the first place, let alone survive after it was reported by media outlets.

Democratic Sen. Jon Tester of Montana, where the balloon was first reported to be on Thursday, said he’s planning on holding a hearing of the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee he chairs to get answers about the balloon incident.

“Montanans value their freedom and privacy and I’ll always fight to defend both,” Tester said Friday. “China’s actions are a clear threat to those values and to America’s national security, and I’m demanding answers from the Biden Administration. I will be pulling people before my committee to get real answers on how this happened, and how we can prevent it from ever happening again.”

Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.) is also looking for answers after the balloon traversed his state on Friday.

“I’m calling for an investigation and demanding answers from the Biden Admin. on why a Chinese spy balloon was allowed to hover over critical military infrastructure in Missouri and across the interior of the U.S. without any intervention,” he tweeted.

?BREAKING: I’m calling for an investigation and demanding answers from the Biden Admin. on why a Chinese spy balloon was allowed to hover over critical military infrastructure in Missouri and across the interior of the U.S. without any intervention. pic.twitter.com/c25ZEGKpWC

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CCP has been creating spy balloons for YEARS out of a heavily guarded naval base in southern China

CCP has been creating spy balloons for YEARS out of a heavily guarded naval base in southern China

The Chinese spy balloon that flew across the United States was created in a factory on a heavily guarded naval base in southern China. This factory has been pumping out a variety of espionage crafts for years.

The military base in question is the Yulin Naval Base, operated by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy on the southern coast of Hainan Island, facing the South China Sea. Not much is known about the base apart from what little intelligence has been gathered from satellite images and other open-source intelligence.

What is known is that construction on the base began in the early 2000s and that the base is still expanding to allow the docking of warships, including nuclear-capable submarines. (Related: Chinese spy balloon that flew over Montana could be used to carry EMP or nuclear weapons.)

Furthermore, according to information recently shared by the American intelligence community, the Chinese spy balloon was manufactured on this base as part of a sweeping foreign surveillance program run by the PLA. Operations of this surveillance program are centered around the Yulin Naval Base.

According to the Department of Defense, along with the balloon that crossed American airspace, the Pentagon is aware of at least four previous balloons that have flown over U.S. territory.

“This is what we assess as part of a larger Chinese surveillance balloon program,” Pentagon Press Secretary Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder told reporters. “This is a program that’s been operated for several years.”

Analysts are still uncertain just how large China’s spy balloon fleet is. But one U.S. official who spoke with reporters suggests there have been “dozens” of espionage flights conducted since 2018.

Known flights over U.S. territory include flybys over Hawaii, Florida, Texas and Guam. Three of the four incidents occurred during the administration of former President Donald Trump but were only recently confirmed to be flights of Chinese surveillance airships.

Chinese aerial surveillance program has also targeted other countries

Before the spy balloon that crossed the U.S. was shot down off the coast of South Carolina, defense officials noted that another spy balloon was observed transiting Central and South America.

According to defense and intelligence officials, these surveillance balloons have been spotted over five continents. Reports indicate that they have collected information on military assets in countries and areas of emerging strategic interest to China – including India, Japan, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.

“These balloons are all part of a PRC [People’s Republic of China] fleet of balloons developed to conduct surveillance operations, which also violated the sovereignty of other countries,” said one senior defense official in a news briefing.

“What the Chinese have done is taken an unbelievably old technology, and basically married it with modern communications and observation capabilities,” said one official who spoke with reporters on condition of anonymity because of the subject’s extreme sensitivity. “It’s a massive effort.”

The U.S. and its allies who have spotted the balloons within their territories have begun to share specifics with officials, concerned that Beijing may be targeting their military facilities.

This sharing of intelligence is how Japan found out that an aerial orb sighting in 2020 might have been a spy balloon.

“Some people thought this was a UFO,” said a Japanese official. “In hindsight, people are realizing that was a Chinese espionage balloon. But at the time it was purely novel – nobody had seen this… So there’s a lot of heightened attention at this time.”

“There has been great interest in this on the part of our allies and partners,” noted a senior White House official. “Many of them recognize that they, too, may be vulnerable or susceptible to this or an object of interest to the PRC.”

Learn about other threats to American national security at NationalSecurity.news.

Watch former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon and former Defense Intelligence Agency officer Rebekah Koffler discuss below how the intelligence community’s focus on Ukraine allowed the Chinese spy balloon to slip unnoticed.

Another way of looking at it is - they are using these as some sort of ionizing radiation delivery system to poison a large swath of people.

A payload that uses sound waves so the radiation can travel and affect the people on the ground.

The antennas distributed en masse via vaccines, geoengineering, street lights can further assist in the demise of targets.

Another tool for their belt.

OBJECT SHOT DOWN BY MILITARY AIRCRAFT OVER LAKE HURON, 3 US OFFICIALS CONFIRM TO ABC NEWS

The FAA also temporarily closed airspace over parts of Lake Michigan Sunday for Department of Defense activity

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confirmed that he ordered the take down of another unidentified object "that violated Canadian airspace."

CHICAGO -- Another high-altitude object was shot down Sunday, this time over Lake Huron, three U.S. officials confirmed to ABC News. According to one of the officials, the object was shot down by a U.S. military aircraft.

This is a developing story and will be updated

Michigan Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin tweeted Sunday that she received a call from the Department of Defense, saying "Our military has an extremely close eye on the object above Lake Huron."

RepSlotkin

·

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The object has been downed by pilots from the US Air Force and National Guard. Great work by all who carried out this mission both in the air and back at headquarters. We’re all interested in exactly what this object was and it’s purpose.

The operation marks the third day in a row that an unidentified object was shot down over North American airspace. An unidentified object was shot down over northern Canada on Saturday. On Friday, an unidentified object was shot down in Alaska airspace by a US F-22.

The US military shot down a fourth flying object over North American airspace in a week on Sunday, as the air force general overseeing North American airspace said he would not rule out any explanation for the objects yet.

The high-altitude unidentified object, described as an “octagonal structure” with strings attached to it, was shot down over Lake Huron in Michigan.

is understood to have been the same item that was picked up by radar over Montana on Saturday. At the point it was struck by an air-to-air missile launched by F-16 fighter jets, it had been flying across the Great Lakes region at 20,000ft, a height that could have posed a risk to civilian aircraft

“I’m glad to report it has been swiftly, safely and securely taken down,” the state’s governor, Gretchen Whitmer, said.

Related: What do we know about the four flying objects shot down by the US?

The Pentagon said the object appeared to have travelled near US military sites and posed a threat to civilian aviation, as well as being a potential tool for surveillance.

It was the fourth unidentified flying object to be downed by US or Canadian fighter jets this month. The extraordinary spate of military interventions began on 4 February when a large balloon was shot down off the coast of South Carolina. That object was claimed by China, although Beijing has insisted it was involved in innocent weather research.

Gen Glen VanHerck, who is tasked with safeguarding US airspace, said the military had not been able to identify what the three most recent objects were, how they stayed aloft, or where they were coming from.

While saying that the US was more closely scrutinising radar since the discovery of the Chinese balloon, VanHerck, told reporters that the three most recent objects were being called, “objects, not balloons, for a reason”.

Asked whether he had ruled out extraterrestrials, VanHerck said: “I’ll let the intel community and the counterintelligence community figure that out. I haven’t ruled out anything.”

A defence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that the military had not seen any evidence that the objects were extraterrestrial.

China says at least 10 U.S. balloons have flown in its airspace since 2022

China says at least 10 U.S. balloons have flown in its airspace since 2022

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The hidden truth behind China’s spy balloons

Pentagon, State Department and NSC all keen to downplay China’s overflights as specter of a ‘deep state’ deal rises.

Washington is in a state of confusion about balloons and other unidentified flying objects, four of which have already been shot down. What is their purpose? Will there be more to deal with? Where are they all coming from and at who’s command?

The general consensus around Washington, voiced by Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer, is that all of the “objects” are balloons, even though the White House denounced Schumer for saying so.

Likewise, there is a general understanding that all of these “objects” were different types of Chinese balloons.

The latest shootdown, as of February 12, was a balloon hexagonal in shape that was shot down over Lake Huron. This balloon is known to have traversed Montana, like earlier ones, operating over US strategic missile emplacements at Malmstrom Air Force Base.

That is one of three sites on US territory where Minuteman III MIRV missiles are emplaced in underground silos. The other two are at Minot, North Dakota and Francis E Warren Air Force Base in Wyoming.

It would appear from the White House complaint to Schumer that there is keen interest at the level of the National Security Council, the State Department and Pentagon to try and downplay China’s balloon operations.

It is, for example, more than abundantly clear that these intrusions have been ongoing for at least a few years and have been systematically covered up. The only reasonable explanation for what amounts to a cover-up is to not end up in a confrontation with China.

The main question, however, is why is China so intent on surveilling US strategic bases and missile defenses?

The answer could be that China is either preparing a first-strike capability against the US homeland or is preparing to checkmate the US if it threatens to intervene in Chinese affairs, or both.

China now has a bigger ICBM capability than the US and most of them are solid-state rockets that can be launched quickly on demand.

Unlike US reliance on missile silos and nuclear submarines, neither of which is a first strike system, the Chinese deployment combines fixed hardened launch sites with ICBMs that can move about on rail lines or roadways, making them hard to find and destroy.

Historically, the US has relied on the mutually assured destruction paradigm for security against nuclear attack. Known as the MAD doctrine, it worked reasonably well during the Cold War period, so much so that both the US and Russia (USSR) agreed to limitations on missile numbers and ballistic missile defenses.

Unlike Russia and the US, however, China never participated in missile limitations and has recently been rapidly growing its tactical and strategic nuclear missile capabilities.

The latest balloon over Lake Huron that was shot down probably is only the balloon component. Pilots tasked with destroying the balloon saw “strings” or wires hanging from the octagonal object, suggesting that the payload had already been detached and perhaps destroyed.

The first large balloon that flew across the United States and was shot down over Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, appears to have had an explosives package designed to destroy the payload before it could be recovered.

In video of that balloon takedown, a secondary explosion can clearly be heard well after the AIM-9X disintegrated the balloon. The latest Lake Huron balloon may be a repeat performance. There is no public information on the other two shot down, one off Alaska’s northern coast and the other over Canadian airspace.

Until some of the instrumentation is recovered, US authorities won’t know about the balloons’ capabilities. It is even less likely that the public will get the straight story. To date, the US record is to hide the facts and admit far less than is already known.

Meanwhile, there are serious questions about China’s intent. Why would China dispatch a bunch of surveillance balloons over sensitive US sites at a time when China is experiencing serious internal problems and President Xi Jinping’s leadership is under a cloud?

Is the Chinese military operating with Xi’s (and the Politburo’s) explicit approval, or is the balloon escapade a military-led challenge to the current government? Or is it possibly the case that these overflights had become routine as the US knew about them but never protested?

No one can yet answer the question other than to observe that not flagging the overflights and pushing back on China was a tremendously dangerous US policy misstep. More ominously, there is the additional possibility that top US officials were never told about them, raising the specter of an unaccountable “deep state” operation.

It would be ironic if Xi and/or Biden – apparently like Trump before him – were all kept in the dark before the secret was discovered and revealed.

There is a broad consensus in the US that China’s overflights of US territories and US bases abroad (such as Guam) must stop, either by consent or through force.

Despite efforts to continue to cover up and withhold identifying the source of the overflights, any US president as commander-in-chief will have to take forceful action.

But even as this is written, the Biden administration has not made any discernible or significant protest to China. Pressure will grow for that to change, and very soon.

China should be on notice that any free pass it had previously to intrude over US territory is now gone and that if it continues with the overflights they could lead to real and open conflict.

COL. MCGREGOR: WE'RE DEALING WITH HYSTERIA IN WASHINGTON

Former advisor to the Secretary of Defense Colonel Douglas McGregor gives his insight into the recent unidentified objects sighted over the U.S.

REAL AMERICA - DAN BALL W/ COL. DOUG MACGREGOR, MORE 'OBJECTS' SHOT DOWN OVER NORTH AMERICA, 2/13/23

BREAKING! China to Deploy THOUSANDS of WW3 Balloons, Nuke Bombers by UK, Lavrov "Point of no Return"

China to Deploy THOUSANDS of WW3 Balloons Nuke Bombers by UK Lavrov Point of...

According to him China has their own separate Stratospheric Force.

If they are going to do that, then the expression may you live in interesting times will literally balloon into never before seen loftier heights..

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