The Daily Signal - INTERVIEW | Defense Expert Provides Chilling Insight Into US-China Relations

Episode Date: February 14, 2023

More than three decades ago, the U.S. faced the threat of the Soviet Union in the Cold War.  Now, the U.S. might be facing a situation with China that could be more dangerous than at any moment in th...e Cold War, in the wake of the shooting down Feb. 4 of a Chinese spy balloon after it flew over U.S. territory. “Well, one of the more concerning reports out of this whole thing is the fact that the Pentagon rang up their buddies over in China, a hotline, and said, ‘We’re concerned about this thing, whatever it is,’ and nobody on the Chinese side answered the phone,” Dakota Wood, senior research fellow in defense programs in The Heritage Foundation’s Center for National Defense, says on today’s episode of “The Daily Signal Podcast.” (The Daily Signal is the news outlet of The Heritage Foundation.) “So, even during the heights of the Cold War, our U.S. Pentagon and their counterparts in the Soviet Union would at least keep these communication lines open. We’ve got communication lines with Russia as it continues to be involved in the war in Syria,” Wood says. “So, the ability to talk to each other really helps to mitigate the risk of misinterpreting something or a road to war or something along those lines.” Wood joins “The Daily Signal Podcast” to discuss the Chinese spy balloon, whether we are seeing heightened aggression from China, and how the downed spy balloon compares with the three other downed aerial objects since.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 There are real dangers out in the world, and that's why we have to be careful at this and can't just dismiss it. But that doesn't mean that every balloon poses, you know, a ginormous threat. This is the Daily Signal podcast for Tuesday, February 14th. I'm Samantha Escheris, and that was Dakota Wood, a senior research fellow here at the Heritage Foundation. Over the weekend, three objects were shot down over the United States and Canada. The news comes just under a week after the U.S. shot down a Chinese spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina on February 4th. So what exactly is going on? Were the objects all the same and are we headed for a war with China?
Starting point is 00:00:48 Dakota Wood is joining today's show to answer these questions and much more. We'll get to my conversation with Dakota right after this. As conservatives, sometimes it feels like we're constantly on defense against bad ideas. bad philosophy, revisionist history, junk science, and divisive politics. But here's something I've come to understand. When faced with bad ideas, it's not enough to just defend. If we want to save this country, then it's time to go on offense. Conservative principles are ideas that work, individual responsibility,
Starting point is 00:01:21 strong local communities, and belief in the American dream. As a former college professor and current president of the Heritage Foundation, my life's mission is to learn, educate, and take action. My podcast, The Kevin Roberts Show, is my opportunity to share that journey with you. I'll be diving into the critical issues that plague our nation, having deep conversations with high-profile guests, some of whom may surprise you. And I want to ensure freedom for the next generation. Find the Kevin Roberts Show wherever you get your podcast. Joining today's podcast is Dakota Wood.
Starting point is 00:01:53 He's a senior research fellow here at the Heritage Foundation's Center for National Defense, Dakota, thanks so much for joining us. Great to be with you. Thanks. Yes. Now, let's talk about these balloons. As of this recording, the U.S. military has shot down four objects over the last week and a half. The first was, of course, that Chinese spy balloon that drifted across the U.S. for a few days, and then on Friday, another one was shot down over Alaska. On Saturday, an object was shot down over Canada, and then on Sunday, we had one that was shot down over Michigan. Dakota, first and foremost, what can you tell us about these four objects? Are they all the same? What's going on? Well, the government's reporting they're different. So the very first one,
Starting point is 00:02:36 this Chinese spy espionage, surveillance balloon, was very, very large. The balloon itself, a couple hundred feet in length. It was carrying a box, roughly a ton, so 2,000 pounds. So a very large container. Sometimes it's been described as the size of three buses. You know, so it gives you a visual image. And it had a large solar array. So just like you see a space station, you know, with these big arrays to give it solar power. So that's the size of this thing. The other three have been much smaller.
Starting point is 00:03:08 You know, think of like a small car, dramatic difference. So the balloons are going to be smaller. They're not having to carry as big a payload. What's common amongst all these things is these weather balloons, if you want to think of them like that. The material is kind of a rubber-off. material, right? So there's not a whole lot of metal. It's you consider kind of a soft object instead of a hard object. So if you have a radar system that's looking for stuff in the sky, these are not commercial airliners. You know, it's really hard to get a radar return on a big
Starting point is 00:03:41 rubbery balloon. These things are going to be the same temperature as the surrounding air. So you don't have a hot jet exhaust engine for a temperature differential. And again, the metallic component on this, you know, not a big return. I guess the last characteristic is the speed. So you probably saw in the news that NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, has tweaked its radars. So we're not looking for flocks of geese, you know, or ducks or whatever, right? You're looking for, in the old days, Soviet bombers, you know, or Russian military aircraft or a missile coming in. It's hard. It's hot and it's moving really fast. And so that's what these radar systems are looking for. So now that we're dealing with balloons, soft, colds, moving really
Starting point is 00:04:34 slow, you know, you weren't geared to pick up on that. And so you tweak the software to look for slow, soft, cold things. And now the stuff starts popping up on the radar scope, right? So I think it's a good way and these these altitudes you know the Chinese was at 60 some odd thousand feet another one was about 40,000 feet and then I think this last one might even been a 20,000 yeah I think so I yeah and so the varying heights an average airliner flies about 30,000 35,000 feet Mount Everest is 29,000 feet right so if something like the Chinese balloon was at 60,000 plus twice the height of Mount Everest. There aren't even very many military aircraft that can fly that high.
Starting point is 00:05:24 So, you know, people talk about, well, I can't we just grab the thing. There ain't a helicopter built in the world that can probably get above 25,000 feet. Those are very specialized, like mountain rescue, you know, climbing crews and stuff. So things just don't fly that high. And that's why these balloons are such an effective way to carry big boxes. The box can have anything, you know, radio gear, cameras, sensors to pick up on, you know, thermal activity or whatever it might be. So that's just kind of a roundabout discussion of what these things appear to be. The last three smaller than the Chinese.
Starting point is 00:06:04 The government hasn't attributed them to a source, everybody kind of suspects that they're China, but we haven't been explicitly told that. So right now they're just kind of unknown things. the furor that came up with not shooting down the China balloon, you can bet the administration is not going to make that same mistake, and so they're being much more aggressive at how we deal with them. Yes, I was going to ask if we have heard anything else about where these last three objects, balloons have come from. As of this recording, at least, we don't know that information.
Starting point is 00:06:36 But can you speak to the reaction that we saw? Obviously, the Biden administration received some backlash, some criticism for not initially shooting down the Chinese spy balloon when they first saw it. It was eventually shot down off the coast of South Carolina. So can you talk a little bit more about the response that we've been getting from the Biden administration? Yeah. So where I think the Biden administration has continued to make missteps is just not being honest. You know, if you don't know something, just say, I don't know. and it actually enhances your credibility, right?
Starting point is 00:07:12 You know, this legitimacy, and at least I can trust that you're telling me something because you're not trying to pull one over on me. And so the Biden administration has just been very vague. They're not saying, oh, I don't know something, but you're not telling me something very specific. And so that leads to doubt and speculation and, you know, everything from these are alien spacecraft to something out of Area 51 to, you know, who knows what else, right? I guess all of those are possibilities, but at least tell me what we do and don't know, right? So I think that's where the Biden team really messed up early on.
Starting point is 00:07:46 The other criticism was if we knew that this big spy balloon, the very first one, it was from China, and it's floating so serenely through all this U.S. airspace, why the heck didn't we shoot it down to begin with? Hence this more aggressive approach to the others. Now, in kind of defense of the administration, if I could put it that way, again, radar is a look looking for a specific type of thing. They have varying ranges, and the broader kind of surveillance aspect you have on these, the less likely they are to pick up a very small, hard to define things. For example, in a military use, a targeting radar is a fairly narrow beam.
Starting point is 00:08:27 I'm looking in a specific direction, and a really strong return so that I can apply a weapon against it, right? It's supposed to just a big surveillance. like focusing on something or just kind of looking around the landscape. And so with this balloon coming across the Pacific Ocean, we don't have a whole lot of radar systems in the middle of the North Pacific, right? And so it has to get close enough to land before it could even be picked up. This was probably visually spotted, you know, early on.
Starting point is 00:08:56 And so as you start to be aware that there is something there, now you can focus your efforts, maybe send up a high-flying aircraft or a very narrowly-dural, defined radar beam to get a better idea of what this thing is. And so you can have these gaps. You know, if our Alaska stations are focused westward towards China or the old Soviet Union, you know, Russia kind of. Well, once it gets past Alaska, well, who's looking in that direction? You know, we don't normally try to collect on Canada, you know.
Starting point is 00:09:27 And so it gets into the western reaches of Canada, pretty sparsely populated, not a lot there. You don't really start to pick up things again until you're getting down into the lower 48, you know. And so you are going to have these kind of gaps. You have to reacquire it. You have a sense of the path that it was on. So there's an idea of where to look, but you still have to find it. Again, it's cold, slow-moving, soft target. And so it just takes a while. So there is some defense of the military community or intel community, not picking up on it real quickly, losing track and then having to reacquire it. But that does not forgive them, you know, the government, the agencies for not being as forthcoming as possible, you know, just keeping the public informed.
Starting point is 00:10:09 I want to talk a little bit more about one of the objects that was shot down was in Canada. We were talking before the recording and sort of why the U.S. was responsible for shooting it down. MSNBC asked White House Press Secretary Karin Jean-Pier about this over the weekend. I just want to play that for you now and get your thoughts on her answer. Why is the American military shooting something out of the sky over Canada? Because it's part of NORAD. The NORAD is part of like a part of a, it's a, it's a, what you call a coalition, a consortship, a PACT of nations.
Starting point is 00:10:46 Exactly. And so that's why we were able to do that. Again, we didn't do it in our own. We did it in, in, clearly in step with Canada. So, Dakota, first and foremost, your reaction to the White House Press, Secretary's response. And then also, can you tell us a little bit more about why the U.S. was responsible for shooting this object down that was in Canada?
Starting point is 00:11:11 Yeah, it wasn't really a confidence-inspiring response from the spokesperson for the White House. Clearly, wasn't really familiar with what NORAD is. So, again, it's the North American Aerospace Defense Command. It was organized back during the Cold War where Canada and the United States said, we both have mutual interest and making sure that old Soviet missiles don't come over the polar cap and destroy our cities. And so there is a joint or a combined military command where both governments contribute to that. And we share a common airspace, common awareness. So Canada, it's part of that.
Starting point is 00:11:50 A system picks up on this balloon. Justin Trudeau, you know, the prime minister over there, says, wow, this is a problem. We want to take care of it. but we don't have, we Canada don't have the aircraft that can get up to that altitude and then engage this particular target. So Canada has routinely purchased U.S. military aircraft, F-18s, etc. Those just can't get to the altitude needed. So we used American F-22 Raptors, which can fly to that altitude to neutralize or kill or destroy, you know, take out this evil balloon. So that's the explanation.
Starting point is 00:12:29 It's a jointly shared command, NORAD. Both sides have various assets that they contribute to that. The F-22 is selected because it's one of the few planes that carries a weapon that can get to that altitude and then engage that target and bring it down. I was very interested in that because when I saw the news over the weekend, I was wondering, well, why? But there we go. You just answered it for me.
Starting point is 00:12:53 So I also want to talk about moving forward. Lucas Tomlinson, he's a correspondent for Fox News, tweeted on Monday, U.S. fighter jets have shot down three objects over the past three days. NORAD and Pentagon officials told reporters Sunday night they won't rule out more in the coming days. So do you think now that the U.S. is just more aware of these objects, you know, following the Chinese spy balloon incident and these other three objects that we saw? Or is this happening more frequently? Are we seeing this kind of heightened aggression, so to speak, from China?
Starting point is 00:13:27 It's probably both. I'm reminded when you buy a new car, it's new to you. And then all of a sudden you realize how many other people are driving that kind of car? Because now you're aware of it. And they were probably on the road all the time anyway. Well, now that everybody is aware that you have these balloons and our radar systems are now tuned to find them where they weren't in the past, these things could have been flying around all the time in just an air. posed a threat. Nobody was concerned about them. You know, this Biden White House criticism of the Trump administration that, oh, there were three or four balloons back in your day, and you
Starting point is 00:14:04 didn't do anything. Well, the administration of the military is saying we went back to look at past game tapes. Now we know what we're looking for. Oh, there was this unidentified thing. Nobody thought anything about it. But now we, three years later, we'll call it what we think it was, you know, back then. So there is an enhanced awareness. But you could also have this greater use of these things. So increasing U.S.-China tensions over Taiwan. China could be using this as an opportunity to really conduct some fairly sophisticated surveillance. Why don't you use a satellite? Everybody has them. A satellite peers through a huge layer of atmosphere. It's far away from target sites. They might want to collect on a balloon instead of
Starting point is 00:14:51 being 300 miles out in space is only 60,000 feet, you know, above the Earth. So a balloon gets you closer to the emission sources of various types of energies. The cameras don't have to look through as much atmospheric layers. So it could be that China is just using things like this to look at areas of interest in the United States. You know, intercontinental ballistic missile, ICBM fields, B2, which is our stealth bomber base, at Whitman Air Force Base in Missouri, naval ports on the eastern sea coast. So it could be a combination. You know, we're aware, so now we're looking more, right?
Starting point is 00:15:31 And if tuned our tools to find, there also could be a heightened use of these things. And I think it's also used to recall that in the weather balloon world, something like 1,800 of these are launched every single day. So most of them are fairly low altitude, short range, you know, temperature gradients, pressure differences, you know, is it raining or not? I mean, you know, weather, wind patterns, they're not going to go to 60,000 feet and fly halfway around the world, but it gives you an idea of how many of these silly objects are floating around in the atmosphere, right?
Starting point is 00:16:05 Yes, that's crazy. I didn't realize that many weather balloons every day. That's crazy. I didn't even know that. Yeah, and it's, you know, again, these altitudes. You know, what can you go up and get at that height? How easy or difficult it is to find? How many of these things?
Starting point is 00:16:19 So there's just a lot of variables involved here. Everybody's fixated on balloons. Wow, four in 10 days. Is it an alien invasion, you know, coming in? Or it's just a heightened great power competition thing? Are they some college students, right, that are kind of pranking the system? So you've got a group, maybe they're in India or Nepal or Japan or whatever. And they let this balloon up into the atmosphere.
Starting point is 00:16:47 They float. They see the crazy reaction from the American. Americans, you know, and the news media going nuts. That could be the case. It's just that we don't know. And so there is a risk of speculation, hysteria, really overreacting, and yet you cannot ignore the potential threat. You know, this one-ton box suspended beneath a balloon, well, maybe it's a nuclear weapon.
Starting point is 00:17:10 You know, maybe it's an electromagnetic, you know, an EMP, electromagnetic pulse source advice that blacks out power grid. and stuff. You know, so there are real dangers out in the world, and that's why we have to be careful at this and can't just dismiss it. But that doesn't mean that every balloon poses, you know, a ginormous threat. Just speaking of a ginormous threat, I want to talk about the U.S.'s relationship with China now after this balloon incident.
Starting point is 00:17:40 And what does this mean for, you know, the United States' relationship with China? You know, are we potentially heading for a war? With China. You know, one of the more concerning reports out of this whole thing is the fact that the Pentagon rang up their buddies over in China, you know, a hotline, and said, we're concerned about this thing, whatever it is, and nobody on the Chinese side answered the phone. Wow. Okay.
Starting point is 00:18:05 So even during the heights of the Cold War, you know, our U.S. Pentagon and their counterparts in the Soviet Union would at least keep these communication lines open. We've got communication lines with Russia as it continues to be involved in the World War. war in Syria, right? So the ability to talk to each other really helps to mitigate the risk of misinterpreting something or a road to war or something along those lines. So when the other side doesn't even pick up the phone, what does that say? And to me, it says they're trying to play the United States. They think the Biden team is weak. And so who cares what, you know, the White House in the U.S. says. All those, it's a recipe for disaster, right? So we have had increasing
Starting point is 00:18:49 tensions over Taiwan, as the U.S. has been involved in European affairs, especially with Russia's assault of Ukraine, you know, we're focusing kind of in that direction. You know, it's kind of like the balloon thing, right? You know, which direction are you looking in? So maybe there's an opportunity that China's senses for a distracted U.S. to not be in the Indo-Pacific, and, you know, maybe they would make a move against Taiwan. So they're kind of playing this, right? And they aren't open on lines communication. So there is a risk. Does that result in war next week? Who knows? Could war never happen? Absolutely. But you can't guarantee you one of those outcomes. And so talking is very helpful. Having a military and intelligence community that's robust enough to do more than one thing at a time
Starting point is 00:19:37 is also very helpful. Well, just speaking of our military, the Chinese spy balloon incident comes after polling revealed nearly 70% of active military members have witnessed politicization in the military, and 65% of active duty military members are somewhat or very concerned about this development. And that's according to the National Independent Panel on Military Service and Readiness. So, Dakota, can you tell us a little bit about this poll? And are you surprised to see such a high percentage of active military members saying that they witness this? Yes, so the commission was helped put.
Starting point is 00:20:13 together by the Heritage Foundation and some great colleagues in Congress to really look at this problem. We talk about wokeism and gender identity things and lowering military standards so that you have more people that are making the cut because you lowered the cut line. Where does all this lead? And so this commission was put together to look at these factors. Why is it that services have such a difficult time recruiting? Most of the services to not make the recruiting goals this past year and the forecast is fairly bleak, right? So what's going into all this stuff? And so the survey was done, people in the military, what do you think about the military?
Starting point is 00:20:56 And to the point that you made, they just hate the fact that all of this stuff is kind of being forced on the military from the political establishment, okay? So it seems to be White House top-down directed. of these initiatives come from Congress via legislation, you know, opening roles or service opportunities to communities in the United States that previously would not have been eligible for a great variety of legitimate reasons. But when you're in the military and you see standards being lowered or slipping, you're forced to attend, I don't know, gender awareness, you know, training classes when you'd rather
Starting point is 00:21:38 be out, you know, fixing the tank or flying the plane and all that, it really sours your perception, you know, and it's not like you can say, no, I don't want to do that, you know, military folks, men and women, you know, salute smartly and they're going to execute to the best of their ability. So compounding this, then, is you have presidential appointees, right, who were put in as the service secretaries or key defense department officials, and you do have some politicization within the general officer and the admiralty, you know, flag officers within the Navy. And sometimes you find somebody that wants to climb the ranks by carrying favor and political
Starting point is 00:22:17 ways. And so they will kind of work this to their advantage. I mean, the military isn't immune to these sorts of things that also afflict other sectors of Iraq. And it's just people, you know, it's popular with people. And so this perspective of a hyper politicization of the military. which is supposed to be apolitical really rings hollow. You know, it causes friction within the force.
Starting point is 00:22:44 People then think about getting out early instead of staying for a career or not reenlisting, you know, or re-upping. And when that happens, it makes the recruiting scene, you know, bringing new people in that much more challenged. And so the results of the survey say we've got some warning lights, you know, and bells and sirens sounding at all these areas. Well, Dakota, thank you so much for joining me today. I discussed a lot.
Starting point is 00:23:10 I appreciate all of your insight, and I would love to have you back on in the future. Hopefully no more objects will be shot down, but that remains to be seen. So thank you so much for joining us. I really appreciate it. Thank you. And that'll do it for today's episode. Thank you for listening to my interview with Dakota Wood. We will, of course, keep you all updated should there be a fifth object that the U.S.
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