The Chinese are claiming that this balloon was a science monitoring device. It somehow drifted off course and wound up over the United States. But US intelligence sources say it in no way could have been a weather balloon. There was too much on board in terms of its ability to monitor and surveil.
What started as a curiosity—a Chinese balloon Washington says was equipped with surveillance equipment floating high above the US—now threatens to worsen the already tense rivalry between two world powers.
China insists it was a civilian research balloon that had drifted off course. Its government responded with anger after President Joe Biden ordered the vessel shot down Saturday once it was safely off the coast of South Carolina.
What information can a balloon like that collect? And what does this incident mean for US-China relations? Rosalind Mathieson, who oversees Bloomberg’s government and political coverage around the world, joins this episode to sort out what this was all about—and where things go from here.
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