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Administration scrambles to quell Congress’s frustration over balloon, UFOs 

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Senior administration officials scrambled Tuesday to quell frustrations expressed by lawmakers about a lack of timely information about several flying objects and a Chinese spy balloon shot down over the past two weeks.

In a classified briefing on Tuesday, the officials offered an update on the three aerial objects shot down Friday afternoon and last weekend. Separately, officials said they believed the objects were not threats to national security and were benign balloons.

It’s unclear just how much the briefing calmed lawmakers, as senators say they didn’t get much information from Tuesday morning’s briefing.

They say senior administration officials don’t yet know who launched the objects that were shot down in recent days, whether they were military or commercial vehicles and what they were doing in the sky.  

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) said administration officials are trying to improve their response time to inquiries from Capitol Hill, but that many of her colleagues on both sides of the aisle still feel frustrated about slow pace of information.  

“I think they know that people are frustrated because we’re not getting much additional information, if any,” she said. “We’re getting questions from people that we’re representing. It’s alarming in some sense.” 

Senators heard from Gen. Glen VanHerck, the commander of the North American Aerospace Defense Command; Lt. Gen. Douglas Sims, the director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Morgan Muir, deputy Director of National Intelligence for Mission integration; Melissa Dalton, the assistant secretary of Defense for homeland defense and hemispheric affairs; and Sean Kirkpatrick, the director of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office. 

Several senators leaving the briefing did say they were more satisfied with the administration’s briefing on the latest objects than they had been when they said they were left in the dark for days as the Chinese spy balloon floated across the country.  

“China sent a spy balloon to America. We had our eyes on it. President Biden had a chance to shoot it down over the Aleutians. He chose not to and it floated all across America and then finally shot it down off the East Coast. He took a lot of criticism from that, including criticism from senators in his own party and therefore I think he didn’t want to suffer that criticism again,” said Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.). 

Capito said the White House and administration have learned from their mistakes in responding to the first Chinese spy balloon and brought lawmakers up to speed more quickly this time after shooting down three unidentified “objects” on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.  

“They definitely came back quicker and I think that was helpful. I still think there’s frustration, though,” she said. 

The U.S. military has yet to recover the vehicles shot down over Alaska, Canada and Lake Huron, leaving much unknown about them.

Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) said the objects “could be commercial” but asked “if it is commercial, why wouldn’t whoever launched it resolve the issue” by “claiming responsibility for it.”  

He said senior administration and military officials “have done a good job of getting our situational awareness to where it is today and we had no situational awareness a month ago.”  

Capito said lawmakers still have questions about which administration officials knew about the first Chinese balloon that floated over Alaska, Montana and other parts of the country.  

“Who knew about it when? That’s still not clear. How long did they really know about this? Why didn’t they know about it sooner? Why didn’t do something sooner? So there’s still a lot of lingering questions about that,” she added.  

Sen. Ron Wyden (Ore.), a senior Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the administration can still be more transparent and forthcoming about its handling of balloons and other aerial objects entering U.S. airspace.  

“I think it can be done without compromising, in intelligence lingo, ‘sources and methods,’” he said.  

Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), whose home state was under the flight path of the Chinese spy balloon, said he wasn’t happy with the president’s handling of that incident and that it should have been shot down before reaching the continental United States.  

“I think they could have done better on the first incident and I think they’ve, from my perspective, picked up their game a lot,” he said.

Tester, however, noted Biden got briefed by the military before making the decision to shoot down the balloon off the Atlantic coast and had to take into consideration a variety of factors, such as potential collateral damage caused by a shoot-down and different recovery scenarios.

Senators say they didn’t receive a lot of new information at Tuesday morning’s briefing.  

Tillis said there’s little information on the latest objects because “they have not been able to recover anything as they have off the coast of the Carolinas.”  

Defense and intelligence officials also are still not classifying the downed UFOs other than to say they are “objects,” and there are no signs of “aliens or extraterrestrial activity.”

“They’re not at a stage where they’re going to categorically identify them. They’re balloons, blimps, a number of other things. They’re not from outer space,” Tillis said.  

Partisan lines are beginning to emerge in the debate over how to respond to foreign balloons in U.S. airspace, as some Republicans say that Biden’s decision to let the first Chinese spy balloon float over sensitive military installations may have compromised national security.  

Some Republicans are still upset about what they say has been the president’s evasive response to questions about why he waited so long.  

“President Biden owes the American people an explanation. President Biden should speak on camera directly to the American people today,” Cotton said.  

“Americans are worried, they’re concerned, they’re interested and they have a right to know why President Biden directed the action that he did over the last week,” he said. “On the one hand, the administration is saying we don’t yet know what these last three objects are and we don’t want to characterize them until we recover them but on the other hand it wasn’t a threat. 

“Both of those things can’t be true,” he said.  

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said the Republican criticism of the president is “premature.” 

“We’re learning more about these objects and our ability to detect them hour by hour,” he said. “Our defense and intelligence agencies are focused like a laser on first gathering the information, assessing the information and coming up with a comprehensive view to what is going on.”

“I think the Biden administration is being very careful and very thoughtful,” he added. “I think some of our Republican colleagues are being at the very minimum premature and often just very political.”

This story was updated at 2:27 p.m.


Source: The Hill

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