Spy balloon – live: Biden to address US on shot-down Chinese balloon and three other aerial ‘objects’
US shoots down four ‘flying objects’: What we know so far
President Joe Biden will deliver his most in-depth public remarks on Thursday afternoon on the suspected Chinese surveillance balloon that entered US airspace.
The US president will discuss the US “response to recent aerial objects” and is expected to explain what officials have learned about the shot-down balloon and three unmanned, unidentified aircraft shot out of the sky by American fighter jets over North American airspace.
US agencies reportedly tracked the balloon for several days after it launched from China’s Hainan province, though intelligence officials are considering the possibility that strong air currents may have inadvertently pulled the balloon off its planned course to send it over mainland America, while diplomats from both countries scrambled to respond to the surprise intrusion.
At least three objects were shot down by American fighter jets in recent days which were likely used for commercial or other “benign” purposes, White House officials reported.
Chinese authorities, meanwhile, have continued to deny that the balloon was used for intelligence gathering and suggested China could take “countermeasures”.
Just in: President will speak in one hour on US ‘response to recent aerial objects’
The White House has confirmed that President Joe Biden will give remarks from the South Court Auditorium at 2pm about “the United States’ response to recent aerial objects”.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre is hosting a briefing momentarily.
TikTok’s CEO says he isn’t taking things ‘lightly’ as lawmakers use balloon incident to rev up talks about app’s future in the US
Lawmakers have used the Chinese surveillance balloon incident to boost policy discussions about TikTok in the United States, and officials across the country are mulling outright bans over security concerns.
The company’s CEO Shou Zi Chew told The Washington Post that “tough conversations” are needed before such decisions are made.
Mr Chew, the former chief financial officer of TikTok’s Beijing-based parent company ByteDance, told the newspaper that suspicions that allegations or concerns that the company is abusing user information are “misinformed” or based on “misrepresentations.”
He said that he did not believe the company would hand over such information to the Chinese government “because US user data is subject to US law.”
“We have to have tough conversations on: Who is using it now? What kind of value does it bring to them? What does it mean if we just, like, rip it out of their hands?” he told the newspaper. “I don’t take this conversation of ‘let’s just ban TikTok’ very lightly. … I don’t think it’s a trivial question. I don’t think it should be something that’s decided, you know, in 280 characters.”
New details emerge about China and US diplomatic attempts to resolve balloon incident before its destruction
Emerging details about the decisions made among US and Chinese officials as a balloon made its way across America reveal some confusion and critical misreadings among the world powers that boiled over into partisan battles and media frenzy.
US officials told The New York Times that a self-destruct function did not operate when the Chinese surveillance balloon entered North American airspace over Alaska’s Aleutian Islands, though it is unclear whether the operators refused to detonate the device or if it failed.
Officials also told the newspaper that they believe that China then may have been reluctant to detonate the balloon once it was over the mainland, fearing political fallout if the debris had caused any damage below.
It also is unclear whether operators misread wind currents that carried the balloon in and out of American airspace or allowed it to drift to see what it could collect, The Times reported, echoing similar findings from intelligence officials who spoke with The Washington Post.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and deputy secretary Wendy Sherman reportedly issued a formal notice to a senior Chinese diplomat at about 6.30 pm ET on 1 February, telling him that his government must do something about the balloon.
More than 24 hours later, Chinese foreign ministry officials in Beijing spoke privately to diplomats in the US Embassy to tell them the balloon was a harmless civilian machine that had gone off course, according to the newspaper.
Early on 4 February, Chinese officials told their US counterparts that operators were trying to speed it out of the country, but by then the Biden administration was planning to shoot it out of the sky once it reached the coast of South Carolina.
China blasts US lawmakers for ‘fanning the flames’ of tension between nations with congressional resolutions
China has warned the US against escalating tensions between the two nation’s in the wake of the surveillance balloon shoot down as Joe Biden prepares to deliver remarks on the incident.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin also has urged the US lawmakers to avoid escalating the situation, after the House and Senate unanimously passed resolutions condemning China for sending the balloon into US airspace.
Lawmakers “took advantage of the issue and fanned the flames, fully exposing their sinister intention to oppose China and contain China,” according to the statement from the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National People’s Congress
US military ‘opened the aperture’ of radars to better capture what’s up there, defense secretary says
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin acknowledged that a series of objects shot down by American fighter jets above North America may have been there for some time, as the US military tweaks its radars to better capture what’s in its airspace after the balloon incident.
He told NBC News that the military “opened the aperture” of radars and is analysing data differently, echoing other military officials who have recently explained how such filiter tweaks are bringing in all kinds of newer raw data that would have otherwise been filtered out as clutter in the past.
“We typically are focused on things that are moving fast, and so it’s a bit more difficult to collect on slow-moving objects like a balloon,” Mr Austin said.
He said that officials do not know how frequently such objects have appeared in US airspace. “We’re learning a lot more about that,” he added.
No one has taken ownership of last three objects, US defense secretary says
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin told NBC News on Wednesday that no one has taken ownership of three unidentified objects in North American airspace that were recently shot down by American fighter jets.
“We don’t know … how frequently these things may or may not have appeared in our air space. We’re learning a lot more about that,” he said.
Biden administration likely ‘overcorrected’ by shooting down recent aerial objects, think tank chief says
Bruce McClintock, the head of global policy think tank the RAND Corporation’s Space Enterprise Initiative, told The Hill that the Biden administration likely “overcorrected” by shooting down three unknown objects above North American airspace in recent days.
Officials are reportedly mulling whether to rely on the Space Surveillance Network, which tracks and monitors objects in outer space, to help detect lower-altitude objects.
But Mr McClinktock said that “the lower you tune down things to pick up smaller objects … the more likely you are to have these kinds of false alarms,” he said.
“It’s not like any nation, including the United States, has unlimited bandwidth to look for these objects,” he added. “They have to make decisions about where to focus their sensors.”
Biden administration briefs Trump-era officials on balloon sightings
Biden administration officials on Wednesday briefed Trump-era national security officials and members of the former president’s cabinet on Chinese surveillance balloons that were recently uncovered having traveled over North American airspace during the last administration.
The briefings included former national security adviser Robert O’Brien, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and former National Intelligence Director John Ratcliffe, according to NBC News.
Former national security adviser John Bolton also said yesterday that he would be attending the briefing.
“It is something that [China has] been working on for many years, and that they have tried to improve … in terms of capability, range [and] communication,” White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters in a phone briefing on 6 February.
According to the White House and military officials, at least three similar balloons were above the US at some points during the Trump administration, which began in January 2017 and ended in January 2021,
Those previous flights were “brief” and “nothing like we saw” with the balloon that cruised across North America earlier this month, Mr Kirby said.
Here’s what we know so far about those balloons:
Joe Biden to deliver remarks on downing of aerial ‘objects’
President Joe Biden is expected to address the shooting down of a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon and three other objects that entered North American airspace in his most extensive public remarks on the incidents yet.
The president could deliver remarks as early today but the exact timing of his address has not been settled yet. CNN reported on Wednesday that the White House was considering remarks, and NBC News reported that the remarks are in the works.
Members of Congress over the weekend were calling on the administration to provide them with more information on the three latest objects after receiving closed-door briefings on the surveillance craft. Senators were briefed in classified hearings on Tuesday, and Republican Senators later demanded that the president address the public on the issue.
“The American people deserve to hear more from the president on all of these issues,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters on Tuesday.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken explains why he cancelled his trip to China
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he intended to keep lines of communication open with Beijing to reflect the Biden administration’s push for “diplomacy and engagement” with China, but the surveillance balloon sighting did not create the “right conditions” for his trip to China that was abruptly canceled.
“We’re committed to responsibly managing the competition between the United States and China, and we look to Beijing to do the same,” he told NPR.
The ballon incident was an “irresponsible act and a violation of our sovereignty and international law,” he added.
“But it doesn’t take away from the fact that we are committed to finding ways to responsibly manage it. We believe that diplomacy and engagement are important,” Mr Blinken said. “In fact, this only underscores the importance of having lines of communication. That was in part the purpose of the trip I had intended to take, but in the context of the surveillance balloon, those weren’t the right conditions to go forward with the trip.”
The trip was canceled as administration officials weighed their response to the balloon sighting. It was ultimately shot down over the Atlantic Ocean near the coast of South Carolina on 4 February.
The White House has said the trip was not canceled but postponed and stressed that the incident has not stopped diplomats from both countries from keeping up talks and open lines of communcations.
“We still have an embassy there,” the National Security Council’s John Kirby said on Tuesday. “We still have an ability through Secretary Blinken’s good offices to communicate with senior Chinese leaders.”
Source: independent.co.uk