Chinese spy balloon did not collect data when it flew over U.S.: Pentagon
At the time a Chinese balloon was flying over the mainland U.S., Pentagon officials took steps to protect sensitive information from being viewed or captured.
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At the time a Chinese balloon was flying over the mainland U.S., Pentagon officials took steps to protect sensitive information from being viewed or captured.
Reports have emerged that the Chinese balloon was able to transmit data back to Beijing in real time despite the U.S. government’s efforts to prevent it from doing so.
Canadian military officials are sharing new information about how the Chinese spy balloon came into Canadian airspace late last month.
National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby would not say if the object was a balloon like the Chinese spy balloon that flew over North America last week.
Anita Anand did not say where the Chinese spy balloon first entered Canadian airspace, what locations it passed over, or for how long it hovered overhead before entering the U.S.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the U.S. has briefed dozens of countries on the program, which officials said has been active over five continents.
President Biden and the Pentagon now claim they knew about China’s spy balloon after all. So, why then didn’t they inform the American people? Thankfully, Montana resident Chase Doak captured the balloon perfectly. He joins Glenn to describe the moment he witnessed it in the sky and took the now-viral picture that potentially forced Team Biden to finally OWN UP about the Chinese surveillance balloon floating through our skies… Click HERE to subscribe to Glenn Beck on YouTube: https://bit.ly/2UVLqhL Click HERE to subscribe to BlazeTV: get.blazetv.com/glenn Click HERE to subscribe to BlazeTV YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKgJEs_v0JB-6jWb8lIy9Xw?sub_confirmation=1 Click HERE to sign up to Glenn’s newsletter: https://www.glennbeck.com/st/Morning_BriefConnect with Glenn on Social Media: http://twitter.com/glennbeckhttp://instagram.com/glennbeckhttp://facebook.com/glennbeck
Colombia has been tracking the balloon since Friday, though news of its presence was eclipsed by a different Chinese surveillance balloon that flew over the U.S. and Canada.
“China is a is a potential threat and needs to be watched all the time,” U.S. Ambassador David Cohen said about a suspect Chinese surveillance balloon.
In Montana — home to Malmstrom Air Force base and dozens of nuclear missile silos — people doubted Beijing’s claim that it was a weather balloon gone off course.