Taiwan’s defence ministry said it had detected six more Chinese balloons flying over the Taiwan Strait on Sunday, one of which crossed the island, the latest in a spate of such balloons the ministry says it has seen over the past month-and-a-half.

The ministry earlier this month, in a strongly worded statement, accused China of threatening aviation safety and waging psychological warfare on the island’s people with the balloons, days before Taiwan’s Jan. 13 elections.

  • 🖖USS-Ethernet
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    411 months ago

    Honestly, they didn’t need to use an expensive missile to do it and blow the thing to pieces while wasting valuable intel they could have gained from it if more was intact.

    • @CinnerB
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      11 months ago

      The balloon was 200ft tall. The payload hanging beneath it was 200ft wide. The sidewinder has the ability to explode near its target which is why it was chosen. It was the equivalent of popping a party balloon with a firecracker. They also waited for it to be over a large body of water so the 2,000lb payload (many sensors, propellers, antennas, transceivers, etc) didn’t fall apart on descent and crush people/things, and while they can control a missile if it misses it’s target, they can’t control bullets, which could rain down and hit whoever/whatever happened to be unfortunate enough to be in their path. Bullets fall at terminal velocity, even after they’ve lost initial momentum, that’s why people on the ground die from guns being fired into the air during celebrations.

      So unless they found a way to reverse a Globemaster mid-air and put the payload in the trunk, they made what seems to be the best call. Seeing as the first missile did miss on 1 of the 3 objects, I’d say that call was right.

      The FBI has been analyzing the wreckage after the dive team retrieved it.