By Jim
Geraghty
Monday,
February 06, 2023
That
Chinese spy balloon floated over U.S. and Canadian airspace for eight
days. The U.S. government tracked it for five days, and it said nothing
until a Montana newspaper published pictures of it.
According
to the released
transcript of a press briefing led by an unnamed “senior defense official,” the Chinese spy balloon
“entered the Alaska Joint Operating Area on January 28th, having entered the
U.S. Air Defense Identification Zone north of the Aleutian Islands, and
therefore passing into sovereign U.S. airspace. It then entered into Canadian
airspace on January 30th, and re-entered U.S. airspace over northern Idaho on
January 31st.”
If
you’re the U.S., you might want to shoot the balloon down immediately; that
would minimize the Chinese ability to gather any intelligence at all. Or the
U.S. military might want to see where the balloon goes and learn which sites
the Chinese wanted to get a better look at for intelligence-gathering. The
Pentagon and intelligence community also might prefer to capture the balloon as
intact as possible, to get a good look at what technology China is using, and
if possible, see what the Chinese were able to learn. (The Chinese might have
built the balloon with a self-destruct mechanism or something that erases its
sensitive data or software remotely.) Shooting the balloon down over the
Aleutian Islands or Alaskan wilderness might make it much more difficult to
recover.
Keep in
mind, the Chinese balloon was likely not only taking pictures but attempting to
intercept communications. If you know how the opposition is trying to spy on
you and capture your signals, you can develop better countermeasures and
cryptography.
That
senior defense official said during the briefing, “We were also looking at the
intel value of the balloon.” He said the assessment was that the balloon “was
not likely to provide significant added — additive value over and above other
PRC intel capabilities such as, you know, satellites in Low Earth Orbit, for
example.”
The
technology used in this balloon may not be particularly advanced. Senator Marco
Rubio of Florida, vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, appeared on
CNN’s State of the Union program Sunday and contended that, “I don’t think
the technology or the existence of these things is a great mystery.”
Rubio
said the balloon represented a deliberate message of antagonism from the
Chinese government:
I think what’s embedded here is a clear message. It’s not a coincidence
that this happens leading up to the State of the Union address, leading up to
[Secretary of State Antony] Blinken’s visit to China.
The Chinese knew that this was going to be spotted. They knew that we
were going to have to react to it. They flew it over military installations and
sensitive sites across — right across the middle. I mean, look at the flight
path of this thing. It’s a diagonal shot right through the middle of the
continental United States.
And the message embedded in this to the world is, we can fly a balloon
over airspace of the United States of America, and you won’t be able to do
anything about it to stop us. They calculated this carefully with a message
embedded in it. And I think that’s the part we can’t forget here. It’s not just
the balloon. It’s the message to try to send the world that America — we can do
whatever we want, and America can’t stop us.
That
senior defense official said that similar surveillance balloons flew over the
continental U.S. “briefly at least three times during the prior administration,
and once that we know of at the beginning of this administration, but never for
this duration of time. We spoke directly with Chinese officials through
multiple channels, but rather than address their intrusion into our airspace,
the PRC put out an explanation that lacked any credibility.” The Wall
Street Journal reported this
morning that
the previous incursions were brief and the balloons were undetected until after
leaving American airspace, citing Biden administration officials.
Curiously,
Trump administration officials such as former national-security advisers Robert
O’Brien, John Bolton, and H. R. McMaster all issued statements Sunday declaring
that they were never briefed on any balloon incursions.
This
past week, the U.S. government’s plan may well have been to quietly track and
watch the balloon, with plans to knock it down and capture it within a few
days, with an intention to never tell the public, or to not disclose anything
about it for a long time.
It’s
fair to ask whether that was a realistic strategy in a country full of
stargazers, amateur astronomers, airline and private aircraft pilots,
etc. A former
photographer for the Billings Gazette was in the right place at the right time,
got some good pictures, and the cat was out of the bag.
For now, the White House opted not to inform the American public.
Events, however, soon forced Biden’s hand.
On Thursday afternoon, the Billings Gazette, a local Montana paper,
published a photo of the balloon — meaning it was only a matter of time until
national media would pick up on the report and the Biden administration would
have to face questions.
The pace of discussions in the White House quickened.
In a call starting at 5:15 p.m. on Thursday, the administration finally
went public. That spurred a rush to brief lawmakers on Capitol Hill. The Biden
administration will hold a briefing next week for the “Gang of Eight,” a group
of lawmakers including the chairs and ranking members of the House and Senate
intelligence committees.
Once the
public knew about the balloon, there was no advantage in the U.S. government
playing down the significance of the incursion. Once you’ve caught your
opponent’s hand in the cookie jar, you might as well make the biggest deal as
possible about it. A common Chinese
negotiating tactic is to play the victim, insist that their negotiation partner has
wronged them, and demand that the opponent make concessions in order to make
amends. With a Chinese spy balloon caught over U.S. airspace and near military
bases, the Biden administration no doubt believed it could put the shoe on the
other foot and act as the unfairly wronged party.
Alas,
there’s little sign that the Chinese government feels chastened or embarrassed.
The Chinese
Foreign Ministry released a statement Sunday declaring a protest “against the U.S.
attack on a civilian unmanned airship by force. 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 [uncontrollable
circumstances] was totally unexpected. The Chinese side has clearly asked the
U.S. side to properly handle the matter in a calm, professional and restrained
manner. 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 US 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.”
The
problem is that the first half and the second half of the U.S. government’s
response contradict each other. From Saturday, January 28, to the afternoon of
Thursday, February 2, the U.S. government response was minimal — tracking it
but making no public comment. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s trip to
Beijing was still on schedule.
But the
moment the Biden administration no longer had the option of ignoring the spy
balloon, the U.S. government response turned on a dime. Thursday evening, the
Pentagon issued its
official statement, held its
background briefing that
mentioned “the mobilization of a number of assets including F-22s,” and Friday
morning Blinken canceled his trip. Blinken called up Wang Yi, the director of
the Chinese Communist Party’s Central Foreign Affairs Office, and declared that, “This is an
irresponsible act and a clear violation of U.S. sovereignty and international
law that undermined the purpose of the trip.”
That’s
all true, but the balloon was a violation of U.S. sovereignty and international
law the moment it went over Alaska. It was a violation that the Biden
administration was apparently willing to pretend not to notice or downplay
right up until the moment it appeared in the press. Then, when it became clear
that a Chinese spy aircraft was floating, unimpeded, over U.S. military bases
and the rest of the country, the Biden administration rolled into action;
apparently, Blinken’s ability to meet with the Chinese was dependent upon the
American people not knowing that there was a spy balloon over their heads.
Then, once the balloon was over the Atlantic Ocean, it was time to let
Maverick and Rooster ride into the Danger Zone.
The
administration’s course of action was apparently dependent upon the photo
department of the Billings Gazette.
On Meet
the Press yesterday, the Republican chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, Mike
Turner of Ohio, asked tough questions about what the administration thinks it
accomplished in all this.
“Clearly
the president taking it down over the Atlantic is sort of like tackling the
quarterback after the game is over,” Turner said. “The satellite had completed
its mission. This should never have been allowed to enter the United States,
and it never should’ve been allowed to complete its mission. If you ask
somebody to draw an X at every place where our sensitive missile defense sites,
our nuclear weapons infrastructure, our nuclear weapon sites are, you would put
them all along this path.”
Turner
also echoed Rubio in pointing out that Beijing didn’t seem all that worried
about getting caught: “What they were trying to accomplish obviously was
important enough to China to take the risk of something that was overt. This
was not covert, this wasn’t secret. They did it in such a grand scale. They
knew that the United States would know, and they did it anyway.”
ADDENDUM: Does President Biden know what his
Department of Energy is doing? Probably not. Biden doesn’t do a lot of
sit-down interviews anymore, and it’s not hard to see why. Wouldn’t you love to
see him asked why the Department of Energy is trying to phase out the use of
natural-gas stoves by proposing new efficiency standards that would ban the
sale of 20 of the 21 gas stoves currently on the market? We know the Biden
family uses a gas stove. The White
House kitchen uses a gas-stove range. And according to a
statement issued last month, “The president does not support banning gas stoves.”
My guess
is that Biden has no idea what his Department of Energy is doing, or why. Yes,
he’s the president, but he’s not really running the executive branch. The
federal agencies are just doing whatever they want, as the White House calls a
lid.
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