US Navy releases first photos of China balloon debris

COUNTERINTELLIGENCE

Kirby said there was no intention to send the pieces back. “I know of no such intention or plans to return it,” he said.

VanHerck said the balloon debris would be carefully studied.

“I don’t know where the debris is going to go for a final analysis, but I will tell you that certainly, the intel community along with the law enforcement community that works this under counterintelligence will take a good look at it,” he said.

The Biden administration is painting the incident as a provocative move by China that turned into something of an own goal by providing US intelligence services with valuable data.

According to Kirby, measures were taken to ensure the balloon’s instruments were “mitigated” in their ability to spy, while “at the same time increasing and improving our ability to collect intelligence and information from it”.

“We’re still analysing the information that we were able to collect off of the balloon before we shot it out of the sky and now we’re going to recover it and I suspect we may learn even more.”

One detail already known, Kirby said, is that the balloon was not merely drifting but had propellers and steering to give a measure of control, even as it was swept along in the high-altitude Jet Stream wind.

“It is true that this balloon had the ability manoeuvre itself – to speed up, to slow down and to turn. So it had propellers, it had a rudder, if you will, to allow it to change direction,” he said.

“But the most important navigational vector was the jet stream itself, the winds at such a high altitude.”