"Spy" balloon, flying objects: what we know about intrusions over North America

Three objects -- including one described by Washington as a Chinese spy balloon -- have been shot down over the United States or Canada in one week

"Spy" balloon, flying objects: what we know about intrusions over North America

Three objects -- including one described by Washington as a Chinese spy balloon -- have been shot down over the United States or Canada in one week. Here's what we know about these mysterious intrusions.

- A ball and two objects

On February 2, the Pentagon announced that it was tracking a balloon flying at high altitude over United States territory and sensitive military sites.

For Washington, no doubt, it is a Chinese spy balloon, which entered American territory several days ago. Beijing replies that it is a civilian aircraft used for research purposes, mainly meteorological.

On February 4, the US military shot down the balloon off South Carolina (southeast).

Then on February 10, Washington announced that it had shot down a high-flying "object" over Alaska.

"We don't know who owns it, whether it's a state or a company or an individual (...). And we don't understand its use for the time being," says a spokesperson for the House. White.

The next day, Saturday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that an "unidentified object" flying over northwestern Canada had been shot down, as part of a joint operation between Washington and Ottawa.

- Size and details

The three craft were shot down by US F-22 fighters using AIM-9X missiles, authorities said.

The Chinese balloon was about 60 meters high and carried a kind of huge basket weighing more than a ton, according to the Pentagon. Its size would be comparable to that of three buses.

A senior US State Department official said the craft had "numerous antennae, a set likely capable of collecting and geo-locating communications", and was "fitted with solar panels large enough to provide the energy required for the operation of multiple sensors collecting intelligence".

The other objects were about the size of a Volkswagen Beetle, officials said.

The leader of the Senate Democrats, Chuck Schumer, who received information from the White House on the subject, said Sunday that the last two objects were probably balloons too.

Unlike the Chinese balloon, the second object did not appear to have a propulsion system or controls allowing it to steer, according to the White House.

The third was a "cylindrical device", according to Canadian Defense Minister Anita Anand. He was shot in the Yukon, about 100 miles from the Canada-US border.

Both were flying at an altitude of around 12,000 meters and posed a possible threat to the safety of civilian flights, according to authorities in both countries.

Washington has since claimed that Beijing sent three aircraft for brief incursions into American skies during Donald Trump's presidency, as well as one early in Joe Biden's term -- and that they went undetected at the time. 'era.

- Debris analysis

The American authorities are still busy harvesting the remains of the Chinese balloon in the Atlantic, near the coast of South Carolina, using planes, boats and small submarines.

An official from the FBI, the agency responsible for examining them, recently indicated that only a "small part" of the surveillance equipment had been recovered.

She is being examined at Federal Police labs in Quantico, Va., he added.

What has been recovered so far was floating on the surface of the ocean, he said. Most of the equipment, including the large solar panels, sank to a depth of 14 meters.

For the object shot down over Alaska, the debris fell on frozen waters near the Canadian border, the White House said.

The search continued on Saturday near the American town of Deadhorse. "Arctic weather conditions, including cold, snow and limited daylight, are a factor," the military said.

Regarding the third object, the Canadian forces "will now recover and analyze the debris", according to Justin Trudeau.

- Why these objects now?

According to specialists, American and Canadian intelligence continuously receive huge amounts of data and are particularly on the lookout for potential missiles, not slow objects like balloons.

"The truth is...most of what we were looking for didn't look like balloons. Now, of course, we're looking for them. So I think we're finding more stuff," he said on Sunday. elected Democrat Jim Himes, member of the House Intelligence Committee.

The United States believes the balloon was controlled by the Chinese military and was part of a fleet sent by Beijing over more than 40 countries on five continents for espionage purposes.

For some analysts, this could be the start of a major Chinese spy operation to map out foreign military capabilities, ahead of a possible rise in tensions around Taiwan in the years to come.

12/02/2023 19:06:32 -         Washington (AFP) -         © 2023 AFP