National
Review Online
Thursday,
February 16, 2023
What exactly
is U.S. policy toward shooting down unidentified flying objects — UFOs — over
North American airspace? It’s hard to say.
President
Biden’s prepared statement concerning recent events on Thursday afternoon —
he took no questions — combined with a review of the relevant timeline
only adds to the confusion.
On
January 28, a Chinese spy balloon entered Alaskan airspace. As it continued
east, drifting over Canada and then Montana — very close to the silos housing
America’s strategic nuclear missiles — the balloon was spotted by observers on
the ground, and it became a public sensation.
On
February 4, on the president’s orders, as the balloon went feet wet over Myrtle
Beach, S.C., an F-22 fired a single Sidewinder missile at it, bringing it down
over the Atlantic.
On
February 10, a U.S. warplane engaged a UFO over northern Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay.
The White House described the object as car-sized, and Defense Department
officials offered conflicting statements regarding whether or not this object
was a balloon.
On
February 11, an American F-22 was ordered to down a “cylindrical” object,
smaller than the original spy balloon, over Canada’s Yukon territory at the
direction of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
On
February 12, a third UFO was blown out of the sky over Lake Huron. This object
has been described as “octagonal” in structure “with strings hanging off” and
“no discernible payload” by administration officials.
In his
statement, Biden was full of his usual bluster — he will make “no apologies”
for shooting down the Chinese spy balloon, Biden thundered, as if anyone is
asking him to apologize for that — but after taking flak from various
quarters over his decision to allow the spy balloon to float across thousands
of miles of American territory, the president and his administration’s
functionaries, despite various threads of argument, still haven’t offered a
coherent explanation for their actions:
The
original spy balloon was not shot down over the continental U.S. because of
concerns that debris could injure those on the ground. Yes, but the three following
UFOs were downed over American or allied airspace, and the administration had
an opportunity to shoot down the original balloon over the remote Aleutian
Islands but chose not to. Indeed, the New York Times has
reported that the U.S. government tracked the spy balloon from the time of its
launch in late January from southern China and as it moved across the open
Pacific.
By
refraining from shooting the balloon down, we were able to track it and impede
its ability to gather intelligence on us, while turning the tables and
gathering data on it. Yes,
but the following three UFOs were shot down without our air-defense command
being able to at the time identify an apparent origin, purpose, or
intent.
The
balloon was not shot down because it contained no discernible offensive
payload. Yes,
but American officials have said that the three UFOs did not present
“affirmative indications of a military threat” and yet they were brought down
out of “an abundance of caution,” and Biden told the public that “we don’t
know yet exactly what these objects were” and “nothing right now” indicates
that they are “related to China’s spy balloon program” or part of another
country’s surveillance efforts.
None of
this adds up. The best that can be offered by the administration is that the
balloon was flying high above commercial air traffic while the three UFOs were
flying at altitudes that could present a theoretical danger to airliners. That
does not explain, however, why the administration couldn’t clear the local
airspace of commercial travel as it tracked the objects, something well within
the purview, capabilities, and procedures of the FAA.
Now that
the president has told the public that these objects were likely benign in
nature — perhaps tied to commercial or research activities — and that it’s
become apparent that there have been many similar unidentified objects over
North America in the recent past, the question becomes: Why fire live
missiles at these three?
We must
conclude that the administration began firing missiles and asking questions
later because it was retreating in the face of embarrassment and public pressure.
For a White House that has so often boasted about its “adult in the room” bona
fides to have bungled the initial stages of this fiasco and then resorted to
shock-and-awe cowboy diplomacy in answer to its political humiliation: Now that
would be a scandal indeed. If, in an effort to ameliorate that embarrassment,
President Biden is now shooting down the sort of stuff we’ve long known about
but never thought was threatening enough to shoot down — at the cost of
potentially escalating a geopolitical crisis with a nuclear-armed rival — we
are in more trouble than we knew.
Americans
are not accustomed to having interceptor warplanes engage aircraft over their
own skies. These events are not, so to speak, normal. Conservatives rightly
grant the commander in chief a certain amount of deference on issues of
national security and clandestine activities. But this is not a black-bag
operation in a war zone or cloak-and-dagger spy games in Cold War–era East
Berlin. These incidents have concerned Americans’ own backyard. The last week
of silence, off-the-record background briefings, and vague and contradictory
statements from spokesmen and low-ranking officials has only served to sow
confusion, mistrust, and fever-swamp conspiracy-theorizing. The rampant and
unhelpful speculation that the UFOs were extraterrestrial in origin can be laid
entirely at the Biden administration’s feet.
The
president promised that an interagency task force will come up with “sharper
rules” on how the United States will deal with unidentified objects “going
forward” — which we can’t help but notice is a tacit admission that Joe Biden
didn’t exactly have an established policy beforehand. Of course, this policy
will remain classified because you, the citizen, don’t have a right to know how
your government will handle potential threats over your own head.
Leaving
the UFOs aside, the president of the United States still owes
the American people basic answers on the Chinese spy balloon program — answers
that were conspicuously absent from his statement: Has the People’s Republic of
China overflown the United States or its allies with high-altitude spy balloons
on other occasions? For how long? What threat do they pose to the American
people, our allies, and our interests? Why have U.S. officials given
contradictory statements regarding how long the U.S. was aware of the spy
balloon? Why did the U.S. not shoot the balloon down while it was still over
the Pacific and before it traversed North America? Has the U.S. government
unambiguously relayed to the Chinese government that we will not tolerate such
activity in the future? How will we respond if the Chinese do not comply?
Joe
Biden has been forced into making a statement on these issues, but it’s hard to
identify any coherent American policy here. Perhaps the president should
apologize for that.
No comments:
Post a Comment