Posted on Feb 4, 2023
When a US Navy EP-3 collided with a Chinese J-8 interceptor: the Hainan incident and the last...
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Edited 2 y ago
Posted 2 y ago
Responses: 2
That balloon should have been shot down, not only their having it in restricted airspace and having no good purpose anyway and allowing that to happen solves nothing. Think back to WWII also remember that Japan flew unmanned balloons over the US carrying explosives. I'm sure China learned not only the information they wanted but also how weak the US response was. You can bet this won't be the end of this sort of activity and more by the Chinese Communist Government especially with the lack of response by the United States Officials.
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LTC (Join to see)
In 1945, a Japanese Balloon Bomb Killed Six Americans, Five of Them Children, in Oregon
The military kept the true story of their deaths, the only civilians to die at enemy hands on the U.S. mainland, under wraps
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
Except we were at war with Japan at the time. There really isn't anything new that balloon can collect. Let it float on, get over water inside the US ADIZ then shoot it down. No risk of debris hitting anyone/anything and we can have ships in the area to collect it.
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COL Randall C.
Looks like the US just shot down the Chinese "weather" balloon. Time to make more popcorn. |...
Looks like the US just shot down the Chinese "weather" balloon. Time to make more popcorn.
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SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
Also the picture shown here is set up for visitors of a now not used missile facility. The glass dome was added so visitors could see what was below the ground level.
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SFC Casey O'Mally
Not at all true. There are plenty of areas that have been specifically banned from surveillance. Google maps has no street view or satellite view, etc.
And even if it WERE true, that is no reason to allow, nay, ENCOURAGE, espionage against us.
Refusing to do anything about known espionage could VERY easily be considered giving aid to the enemy. Which is part of the definition of treason.
I won't go so far as to say it IS, because there could be more going on behind the scenes that us armchair quarterbacks know nothing about. Hell, there probably IS more going on than we know about.
So I won't say it IS treason. I will just say that based on the information we have - which is admittedly not likely to be all of the information - it certainly LOOKS a hell of a lot like treason.
And even if it WERE true, that is no reason to allow, nay, ENCOURAGE, espionage against us.
Refusing to do anything about known espionage could VERY easily be considered giving aid to the enemy. Which is part of the definition of treason.
I won't go so far as to say it IS, because there could be more going on behind the scenes that us armchair quarterbacks know nothing about. Hell, there probably IS more going on than we know about.
So I won't say it IS treason. I will just say that based on the information we have - which is admittedly not likely to be all of the information - it certainly LOOKS a hell of a lot like treason.
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Sgt Ron Harris
SFC Casey O'Mally - The Chinese spying here is nothing new. Go to ANY National Lab. in the country and you will find Chinese students and scientists, straight from China, in any research building. Not saying they are all spies or am I saying they're all bad people, what I am saying is the government allows "strange bedfellows". Back in the late 70s-early 80s, Argonne National Lab. built 2 of the largest electro-magnets in the world. They weighed 103 tons each. One was transported to Stanford, Cal., by truck, (a special made vehicle w/104 tires on it), and the other was flown to the University of Moscow, USSR, in a C5 Galaxy.....but only after Russia promised not to confiscate it.
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