NewsBite

‘US in decline’: Suspicions about China’s motive behind spy balloon

China flew a spy balloon over America “on purpose” to send a sinister message to the world, according to one top-ranking US politician.

US downing of spy balloon an ‘over-reaction’: China

A top-ranking senator has claimed China intentionally flew a spy balloon over the United States to send the message that America is in “decline”.

“They did this on purpose,” Republican senator for Florida Marco Rubio said about the suspected Chinese spy balloon shot down by the US on the weekend.

“They understood that it was going to be spotted, they knew the US government would have to reveal it, that people were going to see it over the sky. And the message they were trying to send is what they believe internally, and that is that the United States is a once-great superpower that’s hollowed out; it’s in decline,” Mr Rubio, who is on the Senate Intelligence Committee, told ABC News, the New York Post reports.

Mr Rubio rejected China’s excuse that the balloon was a “civilian aircraft” which had flown off course, adding that the Biden administration’s decision to initially keep quiet about the object after it entered US airspace and not shoot it down until it was off the East Coast played right into China’s intentions.

Republican senator Marco Rubio believes China dispatched the balloon to send a message the US is in ‘decline’. Picture: Joe Raedle/AFP
Republican senator Marco Rubio believes China dispatched the balloon to send a message the US is in ‘decline’. Picture: Joe Raedle/AFP

“The message [China] is trying to send the world is, ‘Look, these guys can’t even do anything about a balloon flying over US airspace,’” Mr Rubio said.

“How can you possibly count on [the Democrat-led government] if something were to happen in the Indo-Pacific region? How can you count on them if they’re not going to do anything about a balloon over US airspace? How are they going to come to the aid of Taiwan or stand with the Philippines or Japan or India when the Chinese move on their territory?”

Two US Air Force fighter jets downed the balloon on Saturday afternoon, local time, off the South Carolina coast. At that point, it had already sailed across the country – flying over a number of military installations – since being first spotted near the Aleutian Islands in Alaska on January 28.

Mr Rubio said he wanted to hear an explanation from US President Joe Biden’s administration on why the balloon wasn’t dealt with sooner.

The Chinese balloon flew at an altitude of around 18km. Pictured here in the sky over Montana. Picture: Chase Doak/AFP
The Chinese balloon flew at an altitude of around 18km. Pictured here in the sky over Montana. Picture: Chase Doak/AFP
The balloon after it was shot down on February 4. Picture: Haley Walsh/AFP
The balloon after it was shot down on February 4. Picture: Haley Walsh/AFP

“I’d love to hear from military officials about why wasn’t it addressed earlier,” Mr Rubio said. “What were the options at that point? Maybe in a closed session, or maybe with the benefit of hindsight, they’ll have some real good arguments about why it couldn’t be done.”

Republican Ohio Representative Mike Turner, chair of the House Intelligence Committee, also blasted the White House for what he called a lack of “urgency” in dealing with the Chinese balloon, telling US current affairs show Meet The Press on Sunday that it should have been brought down immediately when it entered US airspace in Alaska.

Mr Turner said the balloon’s path took it over major US missile defence and nuclear weapons facilities and he believes that the Chinese were trying to gain information on “how to defeat the command and control” of America’s most sensitive military systems.

“That’s a crisis that certainly should have had an urgency to the President and not just wait until this gets to the Atlantic to take it down,” he said.

Mr Biden said on Saturday he gave the order to shoot down the balloon on Wednesday, when media reports revealed people had seen it in the sky over Montana. But he was advised by the Pentagon to wait until the balloon – which was the size of three buses – was over water to protect people on the ground.

US President Joe Biden authorised for the balloon to be shot down on Saturday, once it was over water. Picture: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP
US President Joe Biden authorised for the balloon to be shot down on Saturday, once it was over water. Picture: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP
The Pentagon said on February it was tracking the balloon, which appeared to be surveilling highly sensitive nuclear weapons sites. Picture: Eva Hambach/AFP
The Pentagon said on February it was tracking the balloon, which appeared to be surveilling highly sensitive nuclear weapons sites. Picture: Eva Hambach/AFP

“There are no excuses here,” Mr Turner said.

“They knew what this was. They know what the balloon is, what its capabilities, manoeuvrability is from having observed previous actions by China.

“They should have been prepared. They seem not only to be unprepared but to even be waiting: ‘Where is the balloon going to go? What are they trying to do?’ But that’s not how you look at the actions of an adversary,” he said.

A senior Defence Department official told reporters in a briefing on Saturday the military collected intelligence on the balloon and assessed that it had no more capability to gather information than China could already obtain from satellites.

As the US waited for the object to get over the Atlantic, “we also took immediate steps to protect against the balloon’s collection of sensitive information, mitigating its intelligence value to the PRC [People's Republic of China],” the official said.

“Shooting the balloon down addressed the surveillance threat posed to military installations and further neutralised any intelligence value it could have produced, preventing it from returning to the PRC,” the official said.

“In addition, shooting the balloon down could enable the US to recover sensitive PRC equipment,” the official continued.

But Mr Turner said on Sunday: “Clearly, the President taking it down over the Atlantic is … sort of like tackling the quarterback after the game is over.

“The satellite had completed its mission,” he said.

This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

Originally published as ‘US in decline’: Suspicions about China’s motive behind spy balloon

Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/news/world/us-in-decline-suspicions-about-chinas-motive-behind-spy-balloon/news-story/409457105ffe81ec5c05c5b455dd2d9f