NEWS
ANALYSIS
Balloon Incident Reveals More Than Spying as
Competition With China Intensifies
There is nothing new about superpowers spying on one
another, even from balloons. But for pure gall, there was something different
this time.
David E.
Sanger
By David E.
Sanger
Feb. 5,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/05/us/politics/balloon-china-spying-united-states.html
It may be
months before American intelligence agencies can compare the audacious flight
of a Chinese surveillance balloon across the country to other intrusions on
America’s national security systems, to determine how it ranks.
After all,
there is plenty of competition.
There was
the theft of the designs of the F-35 about 15 years ago, enabling the Chinese
air force to develop its own look-alike stealth fighter, with Chinese
characteristics. There was the case of China’s premier hacking team lifting the
security clearance files for 22 million Americans from the barely secured
computers of the Office of Personnel Management in 2015. That, combined with
stolen medical files from Anthem and travel records from Marriott hotels, has
presumably helped the Chinese create a detailed blueprint of America’s national
security infrastructure.
But for
pure gall, there was something different about the balloon. It became the
subject of public fascination as it floated over nuclear silos of Montana, then
was spotted near Kansas City and met its cinematic end when a Sidewinder
missile took it down over shallow waters off the coast of South Carolina. Not
surprisingly, now it is coveted by military and intelligence officials who
desperately want to reverse-engineer whatever remains the Coast Guard and the
Navy can recover.
Yet beyond
the made-for-cable-news spectacle, the entire incident also speaks volumes
about how little Washington and Beijing communicate, almost 22 years after the
collision of an American spy plane and a Chinese fighter about 70 miles off the
coast of Hainan Island led both sides to vow that they would improve their
crisis management.
“We don’t
know what the intelligence yield was for the Chinese,” said Evan Medeiros, a
Georgetown professor who advised President Barack Obama on China and Asia with
the National Security Council. “But there is no doubt it was a gross violation
of sovereignty,” something the Chinese object to vociferously when the United
States flies over and sails through the islands China has built from sandbars
in the South China Sea.
“And this
made visceral the China challenge,” Mr. Medeiros said, “to look up when you are
out walking your dog, and you see a Chinese spy balloon in the sky.”
As it turns
out, it was hardly the first time. Hours before the giant balloon met its
deflated end, the Pentagon said there was another one in flight, over South
America. And it noted a long history of Chinese balloons flying over the United
States (which the Pentagon, somehow, never wanted to talk about before, until
this incident forced it to).
“Instances
of this kind of balloon activity have been observed previously over the past
several years,” the Pentagon spokesman, Brig. Gen. Patrick S. Ryder, said in a
statement published on Thursday. One senior official said many of those were in
the Pacific, some near Hawaii, where the Indo-Pacific Command is based, along
with much of the naval capability and surveillance gear of the Pacific Fleet.
General
Ryder’s admission raises the question of whether the United States failed to
set a red line years ago about the balloon surveillance, essentially
encouraging China to grow bolder and bolder. “The fact that they have come into
airspace before is not comforting,” said Amy B. Zegart, a senior fellow at the
Hoover Institution and the author of “Spies, Lies and Algorithms,” a study of
new technologies in ubiquitous surveillance. “We should have had a strategy
earlier,” she said, and “we should have signaled our limits much earlier.”
Of course,
there is nothing new about superpowers spying on one another, even from
balloons. President Dwight D. Eisenhower authorized surveillance of the Soviet
Union by lofting cameras on balloons in the mid-1950s, flying them “over Soviet
bloc countries under the guise of meteorological research,” according to an
article published by the National Archives in 2009. It “yielded more protests
from the Kremlin than it did useful intelligence,” the author, David Haight, an
archivist at the Eisenhower Library, reported.
With the
advent of the first spy satellites, the balloons appeared to become obsolete.
Now they
are making a comeback, because while spy satellites can see almost everything,
balloons equipped with high-tech sensors hover over a site far longer and can
pick up radio, cellular and other transmissions that cannot be detected from
space. That is why the Montana sighting of the balloon was critical; in recent
years, the National Security Agency and United States Strategic Command, which
oversees the American nuclear arsenal, have been remaking communications with
nuclear weapons sites. That would be one, but only one, of the natural targets
for China’s Ministry of State Security, which oversees many of its national
security hacks.
The N.S.A.
also targets China, of course. From the revelations of Edward Snowden, the
former contractor who revealed many of the agency’s operations a decade ago,
the world learned that the United States broke into the networks of Huawei, the
Chinese telecommunications firm, and also tracked the movements of Chinese
leaders and soldiers responsible for moving Chinese nuclear weapons. That is
only a small sliver of American surveillance in China.
Such
activities add to China’s argument that everyone does it. Because they are
largely hidden — save for the occasional revelation of a big hack — they have
rarely become wrapped in national politics. That is changing.
The balloon
incident came at a moment when Democrats and Republicans are competing to
demonstrate who can be stronger on China. And that showed: The new chairman of
the House intelligence committee, Representative Michael R. Turner, an Ohio
Republican, echoed the many Republicans who argued the balloon needed to come
down sooner.
He called
the shoot-down “sort of like tackling the quarterback after the game is over.
The satellite had completed its mission. It should never have been allowed to
enter the United States, and it never should have been allowed to complete its
mission.”
It is not
yet clear what that “mission” was, or whether the risk of letting it proceed
truly outweighed the risk of taking the balloon down over land, as Mr. Turner
seemed to imply. It is only a small part of the increasingly aggressive “Spy
vs. Spy” moves of superpower competitors. That has only intensified as control
of semiconductor production equipment, artificial intelligence tools, 5G
telecommunications, quantum computing and biological sciences has become the
source of new arms races. And both sides play.
Yet it was
the obviousness of the balloon that made many in Washington wonder whether the
intelligence community and the civilian leadership in Beijing are communicating
with each other.
“Whatever
the value of what the Chinese might have obtained,” said Gen. Michael Rogers,
the former director of the National Security Agency during the Obama and Trump
administrations, “what was different here was the visibility. It just has a
different feel when it is a physical intrusion on the country.” And once it was
detected, China “handled it badly,” he said.
The balloon
drifted over the continental United States just days before Secretary of State
Antony J. Blinken was supposed to make the first visit of a top American
diplomat to Beijing in many years. Chinese officials maintained that it was a
weather balloon that had entered U.S. airspace by accident.
Mr. Blinken
canceled his trip — a public slap that many American officials believe
President Xi Jinping cannot be happy about, at a moment the Chinese leader
appears to be trying to stabilize the fast-descending relationship with
Washington.
This was
hardly a life-threatening crisis. But the fact that Chinese officials,
realizing that the balloon had been spotted, did not call to work out a way to
deal with it was revealing.
That kind
of problem was supposed to be resolved after the 2001 collision of an EP-3 spy
plane and a Chinese fighter that brought down both planes. For days after that
incident, President George W. Bush could not get Chinese leaders on the phone.
Efforts by the secretary of state at the time, Gen. Colin Powell, also failed.
“It made you wonder what might happen in a deeper crisis,” General Powell said
later.
Afterward,
hotlines were set up, and promises made about better communications. Clearly,
those failed. When the balloon was shot down, China issued a statement saying
“for the United States to insist on using armed forces is clearly an excessive
reaction.”
Few experts
doubt that had the situation been reversed, China would have used force — it
has threatened to do that when it believed outsiders were entering disputed
waters, much less established Chinese territory.
“It makes
you wonder who was talking to whom in China,” Ms. Zegart said. “This is clearly
the greatest unforced error the Chinese have made in some time.”
David E.
Sanger is a White House and national security correspondent. In a 38-year
reporting career for The Times, he has been on three teams that have won
Pulitzer Prizes, most recently in 2017 for international reporting. His newest
book is “The Perfect Weapon: War, Sabotage and Fear in the Cyber Age.” @SangerNYT • Facebook


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