No sign three downed aerial objects were Chinese or spying, says US
China is running a "well-funded, deliberate programme" for spying on us and other countries, says John Kirby
WASHINGTON: The United States so far has no evidence that three unidentified aerial objects shot down this month were connected to China or any foreign spying program, the White House said Tuesday.
US authorities "thus far haven't seen any indication or anything that points specifically to the idea that these three objects were part of the PRC's spy balloon program or that they were definitely involved in external intelligence collection efforts," National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters, using the Chinese state's official acronym.
Kirby said the three objects — two shot down over the United States and one over Canada — "could be balloons that were simply tied to commercial or research entities and therefore benign."
That "could emerge as a leading explanation here," he said.
However, Kirby stressed that China is running a "well-funded, deliberate program" to use high-altitude, hard-to-detect balloons for spying on the United States and other countries.
Such a balloon, according to American officials, was shot down on February 4 over the US East Coast - an incident that triggered a heightened alert, leading to the precautionary shooting down of the subsequent three unidentified objects.
Beijing denies it uses spy balloons and says the huge craft shot down off the coast was for weather research.
According to the Pentagon and the White House, getting to the bottom of the three mystery objects is made harder by the difficult conditions for teams sent to find the debris.
Citing "pretty tough" weather and geographical conditions in all three cases, Kirby said "we're recognising that it could be some time before we locate and recover the debris."
"We haven't found them yet," he said.
-
Blood Moon: When and where to watch in 2026
-
Elon Musk’s Starlink rival Eutelsat partners with MaiaSpace for satellite launches
-
Blue Moon 2026: Everything you need to know
-
Scientists unravel mystery of James Webb’s ‘little red dots’ in deep space
-
ISS crew of four completes medical evacuation with safe splashdown off California
-
Annular solar eclipse 2026: Here's everything to know about the ‘ring of fire’
-
World’s first ice archive created to preserve fast-melting glaciers’ secrets
-
NASA, DOE to develop Nuclear Reactor on the Moon by 2030