I don't like unidentified E36 M3 being in our airspace, and I even more don't like it being shot down over the Great Lakes. WTF?
also, IBTL.
I don't like unidentified E36 M3 being in our airspace, and I even more don't like it being shot down over the Great Lakes. WTF?
also, IBTL.
I wish I had answers for you, but all I've got is wondering whether we've ever had a thread-starter that included its own IBTL... We must've by now, no?
Like The X Files the truth is out there. The UFOs were there but no one was looking for them so they were hiding in plain sight.
It's possible that various organizations have launched balloons had them go rogue and not bother telling anyone - sort of sky junk an equivalent to space junk.
Edit: I saw the path of the first one I think they were trying to spy on SkinnyG
The Air Force/Space Force/ FBI/CIA/NSA/NRO have learned all they can from them. Encrypted code, frequencies, origins, etc. With nothing more to gain, they can be dispatched with extreme prejudice.
In reply to Rons :
If you really think they "went rogue" and just happened to fly over most of the biggest and most interesting military installations in the middle of the us I may have some ocean front property to sell you in Indiana.
https://amp.dw.com/en/modern-spy-satellites-in-an-age-of-space-wars/a-54691887
this is an older article but there are lots of satellites out there watching us and everyone else. Just how it is.
My limited understanding of the current situation is that the Chinese use of these was first discovered from sources outside CONUS (likely meaning HUMINT or SIGINT outside the US). Alerted to the use of these balloons, and as a direct result of the Chinese balloon eventually shot down off SC, NORAD adjusted down some of the filtering used on their radars. These filters normally declutter the picture by filtering out suspected anomalous returns, such as things moving at the same speed as the wind...like balloons. Once those were dialed back, a number of objects popped up, and were promptly investigated. It's a fair bet that there have been many more of these types of objects in years prior. The US certainly experimented with balloons for military and intelligence purposes over the years as well - they are a proven, and fairly cheap, technology.
Yea, between satellites and internet taps, my money is on preparing for yet another pointless and expensive war we don't need. Like our generals are predicting. Except this time with the country that makes everything we use in our country.
RevRico said:Yea, between satellites and internet taps, my money is on preparing for yet another pointless and expensive war we don't need. Like our generals are predicting. Except this time with the country that makes everything we use in our country.
NBC got it's hands on a memo... but they're not going to share or link to it anywhere to be able to read with context.
This appears to be:
There's a non-zero chance of military conflict with China. There is less than a 100% chance of military conflict with China. There are a whole lot of gradation of what constitutes "armed military conflict" in between dignitaries glowering at each other across a conference table, and World War III.
In reply to Beer Baron :
2025 os absolutely too soon and avoidable. Current study is saying 2036-2040 with some rather grim outcomes as far as resources and our economy. But, I don't think China should be our immediate concern, I bet by 2036 that even Americans won't believe in "America".
In reply to 02Pilot :
anyone else think that memo is completely fabricated?
It reads like a tactical ninja mall security wrote it as war porn.
do we have higher ranking folk who still use "clip" incorrectly? The m1 garand, which actually used "CLIPS"(enblock clip) was phased out in 1957.
FEBRUARY.
(a) All AMC aligned personnel with weapons qualifications will fire a clip into a 7-meter target with the full understanding that unrepentant lethality matters most. Aim for the head.
yeah that sounds like some squeaky kid playing video games.
if one of our generals let out a letter like that, i imagine he wouldnt be heard from again.
We are not going to war with China in 2025, this IMHO is military posturing to keep a fat budget. Which by the way could be trimmed enough to save social security.
These balloons are interesting but as usual we are going off in all sorts of directions with a fraction of the real truth. Does China really need them? Take a look at your house on google earth, an old commercial satellite provides detail of my back yard, I can tell when a shingle on the roof has ripped off. So our and their military stuff can probably see when there is a booger hanging out of your nose and with an IR lens see which bedroom(s) are being used at night.
Think about it, if we were doing it would we use our best tech in a balloon that could be shot down and studied or a satellite that they cannot touch? My thought is this is a test of our radar capabilities and the low buck approach reeks of North Korea more than China.
If it's an in-house job to give the F-22 some combat kills and shut people up about it, it's backfiring.
stanger_mussle (Supported by GRM undergarments) said:
I heard the pentagon is trying to recruit him to take over their UAP program now.
porschenut said:We are not going to war with China in 2025, this IMHO is military posturing to keep a fat budget. Which by the way could be trimmed enough to save social security.
These balloons are interesting but as usual we are going off in all sorts of directions with a fraction of the real truth. Does China really need them? Take a look at your house on google earth, an old commercial satellite provides detail of my back yard, I can tell when a shingle on the roof has ripped off. So our and their military stuff can probably see when there is a booger hanging out of your nose and with an IR lens see which bedroom(s) are being used at night.
Think about it, if we were doing it would we use our best tech in a balloon that could be shot down and studied or a satellite that they cannot touch? My thought is this is a test of our radar capabilities and the low buck approach reeks of North Korea more than China.
The balloons aren't for overhead surveillance; as you said, spy satellites handle that. There is some evidence to suggest that they are doing SIGINT gathering.
My guess is folks in the know had been aware of previous balloon/observation/etc efforts in the past. They'd played the typical cat and mouse games back and forth. It just so happens that this one got spotted and the general public did the standard general public hysterics. Now that there are eyes on it, someone decided to take a shot at anything that gets sent over from that direction.
TJL (Forum Supporter) said:do we have higher ranking folk who still use "clip" incorrectly? The m1 garand, which actually used "CLIPS"(enblock clip) was phased out in 1957.
FEBRUARY.
(a) All AMC aligned personnel with weapons qualifications will fire a clip into a 7-meter target with the full understanding that unrepentant lethality matters most. Aim for the head.Considering the imprecise firearms-related language used by officials at all levels in the past 30-40 years, it would not be surprising. Also, "clips" are still a thing in military ammunition, whether or not they are what the letter-writer meant:
Back to blasting UFO's and balloons: How many of those missiles (AIM-9 Sidewinders?) do we have on hand, anyway? How many balloons can the Chinese or whoever make and launch? And where are we on the airborne directed-energy weapons front?
You'll need to log in to post.