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United States China The Military

US Fighter Jets Shoot Down Spy Balloon With a Single Missile (cnn.com) 396

CNN reports: The US military used fighter jets from Langley Air Force Base in Virginia to take down the suspected Chinese spy balloon at 2:39 p.m. ET on Saturday, according to a senior US military official. A single missile was used, the official said....

President Joe Biden said the mission to shoot down a suspected Chinese spy balloon off the East Coast Saturday was successful, and that he had ordered the Pentagon to knock the aircraft out of the sky as soon as it was safe to do so. "On Wednesday when I was briefed on the balloon, I ordered the Pentagon to shoot it down — on Wednesday — as soon as possible," the president told reporters in Hagerstown, Maryland. "They decided, without doing damage to anyone on the ground, they decided that the best time to do that was as it got over water ... within a 12-mile limit. They successfully took it down and I want to compliment our aviators who did it," the president added.

Asked if that was a recommendation from his national security team, Biden reiterated: "I told them to shoot it down. They said to me, 'Let's wait for the safest place to do it....'"

U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said the balloon was being used by the Chinese government "to surveil strategic sites in the continental United States."

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US Fighter Jets Shoot Down Spy Balloon With a Single Missile

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  • by Vomitgod ( 6659552 ) on Saturday February 04, 2023 @06:33PM (#63265603)

    not sure why CNN needs to point this out - you'd like to think it only took one.

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by quonset ( 4839537 )

      The Fox tabloid mentioned it was a heating seeking missle. Not sure how that works on a balloon.

      • Good thing it wasn't a Decapodian balloon... all their tech is cold-blooded.

      • The Fox tabloid mentioned it was a heating seeking missle. Not sure how that works on a balloon.

        It appears to have been an AIM-9 Sidewinder, but it has been a bunch of years since the Sidewinder was just a heat seeking missile. They can be cued by fighter data-link or fighter radar now. The warhead did not detonate, and it may have been deliberately left unfused.

      • The Fox tabloid mentioned it was a heating seeking missle. Not sure how that works on a balloon.

        It's Fox, did they also mention that the balloon was actually launched by Soros to replenish the space lasers with updated 5G energy?

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Assuming the thing was easy to hit. As I understand it there was some concern because on radar the thing looks like something missile systems would be programmed to avoid, e.g. a cloud floating along stationary relative to the surrounding air.

      • There's a bigass scaffolding of crap beneath the balloon (or there was anyway) which is more than sufficient to lock onto.

        • by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Saturday February 04, 2023 @07:23PM (#63265731)

          There's a bigass scaffolding of crap beneath the balloon (or there was anyway) which is more than sufficient to lock onto.

          Given that they wanted to recover the payload to see what it was, they probably didn't want to hit that part with the missile.

        • There's a bigass scaffolding of crap beneath the balloon (or there was anyway) which is more than sufficient to lock onto.

          Well, if they wanted to study what was in the middle of the bigass scaffolding now they are going to need a time machine.

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          I don't think it's the size that's the problem, I think it's the behavior looks like things the missile would be programmed to ignore which was the concern. In any event, since they successfully used a missile that concern turned out to be unwarranted.

        • Note that it seems to have been hit with a heat-seeking missile.
    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      My concern is that a missile is an awfully expensive way to take down something that could be wiped out with a slingshot.

      • by flatulus ( 260854 ) on Saturday February 04, 2023 @07:18PM (#63265721)

        My concern is that a missile is an awfully expensive way to take down something that could be wiped out with a slingshot.

        You can hit something at 60,000 ft. with a slingshot? What a stud!

      • by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Saturday February 04, 2023 @07:21PM (#63265727)

        My concern is that a missile is an awfully expensive way to take down something that could be wiped out with a slingshot.

        I'd like to see you take down a large balloon with a slingshot -- Canada once tried to take down a balloon with 1000 rounds of cannon fire and couldn't bring it down until the helium slowly leaked out.

        This kind of balloon doesn't pop like a party balloon and are under very low pressure, so a hole just causes a very slow leak.

        • This kind of balloon doesn't pop like a party balloon and are under very low pressure, so a hole just causes a very slow leak.

          Perhaps with regular bullet holes in something so large, but to me it looks like if you go frame by frame the pressure wave from the missile blast goes up and pops the balloon just like a giant kids toy.

        • ... Canada once tried to take down a balloon with 1000 rounds of cannon fire and couldn't bring it down until the helium slowly leaked out. ... This kind of balloon doesn't pop like a party balloon and are under very low pressure, so a hole just causes a very slow leak.

          Thanks for that. I posted a question higher up the thread about using guns (from a plane, obviously) instead of missile, to allow the payload to descend more gradually and prevent damage and help analysis, and this provided a good answer/example of why that probably wasn't done.

    • not sure why CNN needs to point this out - you'd like to think it only took one.

      I was thinking guns (from the fighter, not ground) would be better as they could just pierce the balloon allowing it to deflate and descend more gradually, lessening the impact damage and assisting later analysis, but perhaps that would have been more difficult. Anyone?

      • Following up... Someone noted that Canada tried guns to down a balloon once and it took many, may rounds and the balloon still deflated/descended *very* slowly. Perhaps this would have been too slowly for the circumstances. Someone noted that the F-22 ceiling is around 50k feet but the balloon was at 60k feet making guns impractical.

      • by mschuyler ( 197441 ) on Saturday February 04, 2023 @08:29PM (#63265923) Homepage Journal

        An A-10 would have been great, but they can't get that high. Their service ceiling is 45,000 feet. The F-35, which they used, is 55,000 feet. Easiest, most efficient way to take the balloon down was with a missile, which worked. Thank goodness they didn't take the advice of all these ATS desk jockeys telling them what they should have done.

    • A missile? I was expecting something more along the lines of a very big pin.
    • Because in 1998 they tried to shoot down a weather balloon and fired over 1000 rounds at it and couldn't bring it down.

  • it would have potentially wiped out the entire population - all three of them,
  • How do they know it was Chinese?
    • China claimed ownership.
    • The Chinese say it's theirs... they just claim it's an errant weather balloon [time.com].

    • Re:Attribution (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Saturday February 04, 2023 @08:14PM (#63265887)

      Apparently, with the jetstreams as well-known and consistent as they are, you can calculate with pretty decent accuracy where a balloon will travel across the globe. So presumably, given a balloon's current flight path, it's not hard to tell it likely originated from China. I suppose another explanation is that the US military has seen these sorts of balloons before.

      Anyhow, China subsequently confirmed it was Chinese in origin, but said it was a civilian weather observation platform that they lost control of. It's hard to know what to think, but this makes more sense to me than a spy balloon, which everyone claims would be somewhat pointless. I guess we'll know for certain if they have enough debris to analyze.

      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        Apparently, with the jetstreams as well-known and consistent as they are, you can calculate with pretty decent accuracy where a balloon will travel across the globe. So presumably, given a balloon's current flight path, it's not hard to tell it likely originated from China.

        Actually you can far more precisely interpolate a balloon's *past* path than you can project its *future* course. It's the difference in reliability between weather *records* and weather *predictions*. That may be why there's a second Chinese balloon flying over South America right now. Given that, I think it likely that China launched even more balloons than those two. Some of them may have gone far off course like the South American one, some of them may simply not have been noticed.

  • Why a missle? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by NormAtHome ( 99305 )

    A couple rounds from the jet fighters guns through the balloon would have had it settle to the ground, probably with it's payload intact. If it was spying I'd think that they'd want it intact for the NSA to examine.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Saturday February 04, 2023 @09:57PM (#63266019)

    Will they stick a balloon decal on the side of the cockpit?

  • by renegade600 ( 204461 ) on Saturday February 04, 2023 @11:58PM (#63266217)

    If it was a spy balloon, it had already crossed the US and the data it collected was most likely already transmitted back to China.

    • This wasn't about preventing data from being transmitted. This was about recovering salvage and determining what the thing was doing in the first place.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday February 05, 2023 @04:14AM (#63266491)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Why wasn't it shot down before getting into US airspace ??? I "assume" it was detected before getting into US air space, if not, we have something to worry about as our air defense !!!!

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