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Saturday, February 4, 2023

Strike back against China in battle for the stratosphere

 The appearance of a Chinese high-altitude balloon above the United States constitutes the latest move in China’s “gray-zone” efforts to undermine its rivals’ sovereignty and improve Beijing’s wartime advantage.

The United States should learn from China’s gambit and respond in kind.

For more than a decade, China has taken control of the South China Sea not with gunboats, but with a vast fishing fleet. Combined with Beijing’s island-building, the maritime militia gives China de facto control over critical international transit lanes. In recent years these efforts expanded to support illegal fishing in other countries’ waters and sensitive ecological areas.

In this context, the balloon can be seen as the first in what could be many such deployments as China seeks to degrade US control over its skies. Moreover, by offering closer looks than surveillance satellites, the balloon can provide Chinese leaders new intelligence on America’s nuclear ballistic-missile silos, bomber bases and communications networks.

China says the balloon went off course and wandered into US airspace. This is unlikely, as stratospheric balloons have been in operation for decades and have well-understood and robust control mechanisms.

While not precise, stratospheric balloons like those made by US company Raven Aerostar for the Pentagon and Google can steer by adjusting their altitude, accessing winds of different speeds and directions that exist at various heights. This technique enables the balloons to maintain station within a few hundred miles of a ground location.

Balloon in air
China has denied that the balloon was used for spying.
Michael Alverson via REUTERS

Responding to the balloon now that it’s in US airspace is not easy. Although fighter aircraft could shoot it down with missiles, balloons do not present strong targets for radar or infrared missile seekers. And fighters generally cannot fly high enough to shoot the balloon with their machine guns.

Air-defense systems like the Patriot can reach high altitudes and see very small targets, but would generate debris from the missile and the balloon that would come down over a wide area, potentially causing damage like that from an air-defense missile that recently landed in Poland, killing two bystanders in their home.

Given these challenges, the US military should instead focus on preventing the balloon from sending data back to China until it can be brought down in a safe area, such as over the Great Lakes or at sea. Electronic-warfare systems like those on Air Force EC-130H Compass Call or Navy EA-18G Growler aircraft could jam the balloon’s communications.

At higher powers, these systems, or high-power microwave weapons like that on the CHAMP missile, could damage the balloon electronics. When the balloon reaches a safe location, it could be shot down, as future balloons should be once they broach US airspace but before they reach US shores.

A balloon floats over Columbia, Mo
The Chinese government has said that the balloon was merely a weather instrument that was blown way off course.
Anna Griffin/Missourian/AP

The most important lesson for the US military, however, is that it’s time to respond in kind.

The Pentagon has experimented with stratospheric balloons in the past, but this deployment shows the difficulty they present to an enemy. Persistent, solar-powered and able to carry radios and sensors, balloons could give US forces the ability to more closely peer into Chinese airspace and territory in peacetime and create new sources of uncertainty for Beijing. In wartime, balloons could replace the capabilities provided by satellites.

This is just the first salvo for a battle in the stratosphere.

Bryan Clark is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/03/strike-back-at-chinas-battle-for-the-stratosphere/

Customs data reveals China is fueling Russia’s war in Ukraine

 China is fueling Moscow’s war in Ukraine by sending fighter-jet components, navigational systems for military helicopters, and other technology since last year’s invasion, Russian customs data shows.

The shipments, which are not weapons but have wartime uses, are reportedly among thousands of Chinese imports from both state-owned and private businesses recorded by the Russian customs office, a list that also includes telescoping antennas for military vehicles that can be used for communications jamming and parts for a radar system used to detect jets and missiles.

Customs data compiled by the Washington-based national security nonprofit C4ADS and examined by the Wall Street Journal shows that Russia has been able to continue bolstering its military arsenal by importing technology from countries that have not joined the West’s efforts to sanction Moscow.

Other countries continuing to send shipments to Russia include the United Arab Emirates and Turkey, a member of NATO, which has branded the sanctions ineffective. But the Journal report found China is the “dominant exporter” of what’s known as “dual-use” goods or materials that could be used in weapons or less lethal products.

China's President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin
China has been exporting navigational and jamming technology, as well as aircraft parts, to sanctioned Russian companies.
SPUTNIK/AFP via Getty Images
M-17 military transport helicopters.
The shipments include navigational equipment for M-17 military transport helicopters.
AFP via Getty Images

Last year, Turkish companies shipped more than $18 million of goods including vehicles, plastic, and rubber to ten Russian companies sanctioned by the U.S. for their role in the war, the Journal reported.

Turkish businesses also exported at least another $15 million in American-made electronics and technology to Russia, in direct violation of U.S. sanctions aimed at cutting off Moscow’s military supply chains.

30 countries have imposed sanctions on Russia, although Turkey has publicly declined to enforce them.

The U.S. warned Turkey about exporting chemicals, microchips, and other products to Russia that could be used in the war on Ukraine on Thursday and said Turkish companies or banks that disregard sanctions could face punishment. 

Brian Nelson, the U.S. Treasury Department’s top sanctions official, visited officials from the Turkish government and private sector to push them to cooperate with the West to stem the flow of goods to Russia. 

Nelson told Turkish bankers the increasing amount of exports to Russia leaves Turkey “particularly vulnerable to reputational and sanctioned risks” and added that they should “take extra precaution to avoid transactions related to potential dual-use technology transfers that could be used by the Russian military-industrial complex.” 

Despite the signs that the effort to stop goods from heading to Russia is being flouted, the European Union is preparing the unveil a new series of sanctions against Russia on Feb. 24 to mark the one-year anniversary of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin held a meeting with China's President Xi Jinping via a video link.
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin held a meeting with China’s President Xi Jinping via a video link.
via REUTERS

The sanctions package, which will be the 10th the EU has brought against Russia since the war began, will target technology used by the Russian military, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said at a news conference Friday.

Leyen added that the sanctions will specifically target parts used to manufacture drones, which Iran has played a key role in supplying.

The EU’s 27 member countries must agree on the exact specifications of the sanctions package before it is finalized.

Russia's attack on Ukraine continues in Donetsk region as the EU prepares more sanctions against Moscow.
Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues in the Donetsk region as the EU prepares more sanctions against Moscow.
REUTERS
A vendor sits at a flea market in Kyiv, Ukraine.
A Ukrainian citizen sits at a flea market in Kyiv.
AP

Along with the looming slate of sanctions, Ukraine will also be adding some new firepower to its arsenal, sent from its allies from the West. 

The French and Italian defense ministers announced that they will be sending a long-range anti-missile system this spring that was developed in collaboration between both countries. 

“Supplying this system meet(s) the urgency expressed by the Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov to his French and Italian counterpart,” the French Ministry of Armed Forces said in a statement Friday. 

The U.S. also announced that an additional $2.2 billion in military aid to Ukraine, will include long-range missiles that can hit targets up to 93 miles away, approximately doubling Ukraine’s range of attack. 

Along with the aid package, the U.S. also said Friday that it would be using funds seized from a sanctioned Russian oligarch for the first time to aid Ukraine in its war efforts.

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said that the over $5 million seized in June from a bank account belonging to Russian oligarch Konstantin Malofeyev — “for having acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly” the Russian government, the Treasury Department said at the time — will be transferred to the State Department to aid Ukraine.

“Russian war criminals will find no refuge in the United States,” Garland said during a press conference with Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin.

“Today, we are witnessing the authorization of transfer of the confiscated assets in the amount of $5.4 million US dollars to the State Department for the purpose of rebuilding war-ravaged Ukraine,” Kostin said. “We are grateful to the United States for its decisive efforts and support. Ukrainian people will never forget that.”

https://nypost.com/2023/02/04/china-has-been-fueling-russias-war-in-ukraine-customs-data-shows/

Over 32K discarded syringe needles litter NYC public spaces

 The city Sanitation Department reported picking up 32,680 syringes in public places from July through October – a 36% increase from the same period the previous year, according a management report released by Mayor Eric Adams last week.

At this pace, agency environmental police assigned to the syringe litter patrol unit will collect 98,040 needles by the end of the current fiscal year ending June 30. Last fiscal year, they picked up 69,692 needles littering sidewalks, parks and other public areas – more than double the 32,252 collected the previous 12 months.

“The increase reflects the Adams administration’s commitment to keeping New York City streets clean,” said Sanitation spokesman Vincent Gragnani.

However, despite the unit’s Herculean efforts, they’re just scratching the surface on the number of used needles littering the Big Apple — as thousands of others are discarded monthly and many go uncollected, city officials warn.

Some say the syringe surge is a result of lax policies by progressive state and city pols that continue to fuel a statewide drug-abuse epidemic through controversial lefty initiatives like public-injection sites.

NYC parks are favorite dumping site of used needles by junkies.

NYC parks are favorite dumping site of used needles.
Richard Harbus

“The increase in hypodermic needles on our streets is a direct result of years of policy allowing unfettered drug use,” barked Queens Councilman Robert Holden, a centrist Democrat. “Our hardworking sanitation workers put themselves in harm’s way to clean up this city of this scourge and shouldn’t have to.”

The city Parks Department under ex-Mayor Bill de Blasio reported collecting 66,656 needles at 14 drug-invested Bronx parks from May 1 through Oct. 24 of 2018 — but junkies only tossed 11% them in special sealed receptacles de Blasio set aside for druggies. The rest were left on the ground.

Sanitation workers could soon be getting help with the cleanup – from cash-hungry junkies. The City Council late last year overwhelmingly approved a controversial needle buyback program where people can earn up to 20 cents per used syringe they return but are be capped at $10 daily.

The Sanitation Department collected 32,680 tossed syringe needles from July through October – a 36% increase from the same period in 2021.
Agency environmental police assigned to the syringe litter patrol unit expect to collect 98,040 needles by the end of the current fiscal year.
Renee Nowytarger
Worker puts needles in a collection container
The city Sanitation Department reported collecting 32,680 tossed syringe needles from July through October — a 36% increase from the same period last year.
Gregory P. Mango p3200photo@aol.com (917) 673-0112

Critics say such a policy will incentivize drug use.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/04/over-32k-discarded-syringe-needles-litter-nyc-public-spaces/

Chinese spy balloon shot down over Atlantic Ocean

 The US military has shot down the Chinese spy balloon that has floated across North America for the past week.

Fox News video showed the deflated white balloon dropping down into the Atlantic Ocean, 10 miles below, shortly after the craft cleared the South Carolina coast near Myrtle Beach Saturday afternoon.

The FAA has closed the surrounding airspace until 3:30 pm.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/04/chinese-spy-balloon-reportedly-shot-down-over-atlantic-ocean/


US aeronautics balloon becomes most-tracked aircraft amid Chinese balloon concern

 Thousands mistook a U.S. research balloon for the alleged Chinese spy balloon traversing the U.S., briefly making it the most tracked aircraft in the world. 

FlightRadar24, an aircraft tracking website, had at least 4,000 individuals tracking the movements of the U.S. research balloon, many mistaking it for the infamous Chinese balloon that has dominated news cycles.

The U.S. research balloon, called HBAL617, is owned by South Dakota aeronautics company Aerostar.

FlightRadar24 published an update to the research balloon's tracking information, writing, "To provide additional clarity about what balloons are and are not visible on Flightradar24, we’ve updated our database entry for N257TH. N257TH is a standard high altitude research balloon, often released over the U.S. and is not the Chinese balloon."

"Sorry, this is not a Chinese balloon," the tracking information for the U.S. research balloon now states.

Pentagon spokesperson Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said during a briefing Thursday afternoon that the U.S. government had detected a high-altitude surveillance balloon over the continental U.S. The craft has since been confirmed by the People's Republic of China government to be Chinese in origin.

"The United States government has detected and is tracking a high-altitude surveillance balloon that is over the continental United States right now," Ryder said Thursday. "The U.S. government to include NORAD continues to track and monitor it closely. The balloon is currently traveling at an altitude well above commercial air traffic and does not present a military or physical threat to people on the ground."

https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/us-aeronautics-balloon-becomes-most-tracked-aircraft-chinese-balloon-concern