US military shoots down third flying object in three days

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Us Military Shoots Down Third Flying Object In Three Days
Coordinator for Strategic Communications at the US National Security Council John Kirby. Photo: Getty Images
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Thomson Reuters

The US military shot down a flying object over Lake Huron near the Canadian border, US officials said on Sunday, as North American security forces have been on high alert for airborne threats.

Two US officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that the military had shot down the object but declined to say whether it resembled the large white Chinese balloon that was shot down earlier this month.

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US Representative Elissa Slotkin, who represents a district in Michigan, near where the incident took place, said pilots from the US Air Force and National Guard shot down the object. "Great work by all who carried out this mission," she wrote on Twitter.

Meanwhile, Canadian investigators are hunting for the wreckage of an unidentified flying object that was shot down by a US jet over Yukon territory on Saturday.

Recovery teams

"Recovery teams are on the ground, looking to find and analyse the object," Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau told reporters on Sunday.

"The security of citizens is our top priority and that's why I made the decision to have that unidentified object shot down," he said, adding that it had posed a danger to civilian aircraft.

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North America has been on high alert for aerial intrusions following the appearance of a white, eye-catching Chinese airship over American skies earlier this month.

The 200-foot-tall balloon - which Americans have accused Beijing of using to spy on the United States - caused an international incident, leading Secretary of State Antony Blinken to call off a planned trip to China only hours before he was set to depart.

Surveillance fears appear to have US officials on high alert.

Twice in 24 hours, US officials closed airspace - only to reopen it swiftly.

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On Sunday, the Federal Aviation Administration briefly closed space above Lake Michigan. On Saturday, the US military scrambled fighter jets in Montana to investigate a radar anomaly there.

Canada also closed airspace on Sunday near Tobermory, Ontario, which is on Lake Huron near the US border, according to Nav Canada, a private non-profit that operates Canada's air traffic control system.

China denies the first balloon was being used for surveillance and says it was a civilian research craft. It condemned the United States for shooting it down off the coast of South Carolina last Saturday.

At least three other flying objects have been destroyed over North America since then, as military and intelligence officials focus on airborne threats.

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US Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer told US broadcaster ABC that US officials think two of the latest objects were smaller balloons than the original one, which was brought down off the coast of South Carolina on February 4th.

A second was shot down over sea ice near Deadhorse, Alaska, on Friday. The third was destroyed over the Yukon on Saturday.

The White House said only that the recently downed objects "did not closely resemble" the Chinese balloon, echoing Mr Schumer's description of them as "much smaller."

"We will not definitively characterise them until we can recover the debris, which we are working on," a spokesperson said.

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Mr Schumer said he was confident US investigators scouring the ocean off South Carolina to recover debris and electronic gadgetry from the original balloon would get to the bottom of what it was being used for.

Debris in remote locale

Canadian counterparts trying to piece together what was shot down over the Yukon may have their own challenges. The territory is a sparsely populated region in Canada's far northwest, which borders Alaska. It can be brutally cold in the winter, but temperatures are unusually mild for this time of year, which could ease the recovery effort.

Speaking to Fox News, House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Michael McCaul said the balloon shot down over the South Carolina coast had been on a mission to get imagery of sensitive American nuclear sites.

"They want to get imagery, get intelligence on our military capability, particularly nuclear," Mr McCaul said. "And they're building quite a nuclear stockpile themselves."

Republican lawmaker Mike Turner, who serves on the US House Armed Services Committee, suggested the White House might be overcompensating for what he described as its previously lax monitoring of American airspace.

"They do appear somewhat trigger-happy," Mr Turner told CNN on Sunday. "I would prefer them to be trigger-happy than to be permissive."

Republicans have criticised the Biden administration over its handling of the incursion by the suspected Chinese spy balloon, saying it should have been shot down much earlier.

 

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