Times Colonist

Norad: Chinese balloon flew in ‘radar gaps’ over Canada

- LEE BERTHIAUME

Canadians were left with more questions than answers on Friday as a pair of senior military officers briefed a parliament­ary committee about the slew of objects shot down over North American skies in recent weeks.

Among the unanswered questions were why China sent a suspected spy balloon into Canadian and American airspace and what it accomplish­ed, as well as the identity of three objects downed by U.S. fighter jets last weekend.

That includes a suspected balloon that was shot down over central Yukon last Saturday, and another object over Lake Huron on Sunday.

“This is why we want to have an opportunit­y to capture these objects, to use that term,” said Lt.-Gen. Alain Pelletier, the deputy commander of the joint U.S.-Canadian air surveillan­ce and defence command known as Norad. “To analyze them to see whether it’s a balloon or some other type of object, let’s say a type of drone. And in order to get a better understand­ing of their capacity and origin as well.”

Friday’s hearing was the first opportunit­y for parliament­arians to question military leaders about the Chinese balloon and three other objects that have left Canadians and Americans scanning the skies for weeks.

The two military officers revealed that the suspected Chinese spy balloon shot down off the coast of South Carolina on

Feb. 4 passed near several military bases and through “radar gaps” during its flight over Canada.

Pelletier confirmed the balloon, which was first detected entering Alaskan airspace on Jan. 28, travelled through Canada on Jan. 30 and 31 before re-entering the U.S., where its presence was publicly revealed.

The balloon travelled from Alaska into the Yukon and south into central British Columbia, between the border with Alberta and the Pacific Coast.

“The high-altitude surveillan­ce balloon of [the People’s Republic of China] came in proximity to some of the Canadian bases, but I cannot speak of the actual response of those Canadian bases,” Pelletier added.

Maj.-Gen. Paul Prevost, head of the military’s strategic joint staff, later downplayed any potential security breach, saying: “There was no Canadian Forces infrastruc­ture of significan­ce along its path.”

However, both Pelletier and Prevost also told the committee that the balloon’s capabiliti­es won’t be fully understood until wreckage recovered by U.S. authoritie­s has been fully analyzed.

The two senior officers also offered only speculatio­n about why China, which has denied any spying, would opt to send a high-altitude balloon into North American airspace when it has satellites.

“China is trying to figure out our limits, and this was an unwanted, unauthoriz­ed breach of our sovereignt­y,” Prevost said. “They’re probably wanting to know how tolerant we are to that.”

U.S. military officials have said that at least four other Chinese balloons violated American airspace since 2019, some of which were only learned about after the fact.

U.S. Gen. Glen VanHerck, the commander of Norad, has said the balloons were able to avoid detection because of a “domain awareness gap” that has been at least partially narrowed by recalibrat­ing the defence system’s radars.

“Some of that gap has been addressed by fine-tuning the radars and making them more sensitive to things that are high, slow and small,” U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said on Friday.

Pelletier and Prevost were also grilled about the other three objects taken down last weekend over Alaska, the Yukon and Lake Huron, and whether Canada’s aging CF-18s were capable of destroying them.

Pelletier and Prevost did not offer much in the way of additional details, though Pelletier did describe the object shot down in Yukon as a “suspected balloon.” Like Kirby, they emphasized the importance of finding those objects.

Yet the likelihood of a successful search appeared to be waning. The RCMP announced Thursday that it has suspended its search in Lake Huron, citing deteriorat­ing weather conditions and a low probabilit­y of success.

 ?? CHAD FISH VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The remnants of a Chinese balloon drift above the Atlantic Ocean, just off the coast of South Carolina, with a fighter jet and its contrail seen below it on Feb. 4.
CHAD FISH VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The remnants of a Chinese balloon drift above the Atlantic Ocean, just off the coast of South Carolina, with a fighter jet and its contrail seen below it on Feb. 4.

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