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Chinese Balloons / The Ohio Train Crash / Emergency Act - Special Guest Dr. Lee Merritt
Chinese Balloons / The Ohio Train Crash / Emergency Act - Special Guest Dr. Lee Merritt on the Kevin J. Johnston Show.
This show is to help all of you understand that there is a way to win!
Dr. Lee Merritt From the USA joins us for tonight's show!
Here is what happened with the FIRST BALLOON that humiliated the Biden Administration
Jan. 28
China's surveillance balloon entered U.S. airspace near Alaska before transiting over Canada and then the continental U.S.
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Feb. 2
The Defense Department said it was tracking the balloon over the continental U.S., and that the balloon had been over Montana a day earlier, on Feb. 1. Following the announcement, the balloon stopped loitering and proceeded as fast as it could toward the East Coast, a U.S. official said.
Feb. 4: Balloon shot down by A U.S. fighter jet shot down the balloon off the coast of South Carolina.
The spy balloon's height was comparable to the Statue of Liberty, about "200 feet tall with a jetliner size payload," Assistant Secretary of Defense Melissa Dalton told senators during a hearing on Feb. 9.
It had collection pod equipment, including high-tech equipment that could collect communications signals and other sensitive information, and solar panels located on the metal truss suspended below the balloon, according to government officials. It had equipment that was "clearly for intelligence surveillance," including "multiple antennas" that were "likely capable of collecting and geo-locating communications," according to a statement by a senior State Department official.
Video of the balloon showed small motors and multiple propellers that allowed China to actively maneuver the balloon over specific locations, according to a senior administration official, and it was steered by rudder, a U.S. official said.
The balloon's payload weighed more than a couple thousand pounds, according to Gen. Glen VanHerck, commander of North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command.
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Feb. 5: Balloon recovery begins: Recovery of the balloon began. It was delayed by a day after it was shot down because of rough seas off the coast of South Carolina, Dalton said.
A U.S. official said later that underwater pictures of the debris field show the wreckage remarkably intact given its fall from 60,000 feet. The debris field is about seven miles wide and the debris is in relatively shallow water, at about 47 feet deep, according to a senior military official.
Navy and FBI dive teams have been involved in the search.
Upon collection of the wreckage, the evidence was rinsed clean of salt water before the FBI forensically examined it, according to senior FBI officials.
The FBI has been evaluating evidence collected from debris field in the Atlantic at the bureau's lab in Quantico, Virginia, senior FBI officials said. The FBI lab has the balloon canopy, wires and other electronic components collected from the water surface. The officials said they have not detected explosive materials on the evidence that has already been examined.
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FEB 8
In an interview with CBS News, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said that the "majority" of the balloon pieces that were on the surface had been recovered. "We've mapped out the debris field and now we'll go through detailed efforts to recover the debris that's on the ocean floor," Austin said.
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Feb. 10
The search for debris was suspended because of bad weather. The debris that was not retrieved from the bottom of the ocean had been weighted down to prevent it from being moved by the heavy seas.
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Feb. 10 to 12: Three more unidentified objects: Three more objects were spotted over U.S. and Canadian airspace. On Friday, Feb. 10, U.S. officials downed a "high-altitude object" off the coast of Alaska. An unidentified object was shot down in Canadian airspace the next day, and the U.S. military shot down another object spotted over the Great Lakes region that Sunday, Feb. 12.
During a briefing that night, Defense Department officials said the last three objects did not pose a kinetic military threat, but their path and proximity to sensitive Defense Department sites and the altitude they were flying could be a hazard to civilian aviation and thus raised concern.
Dalton said in the briefing with reporters that the U.S has been more closely scrutinizing airspace at certain altitudes, including enhancing the radar.
The unidentified object that was downed near Alaska was the size of a small car, according to the Pentagon. The object shot down over Lake Huron appeared to be octagonal in shape with strings hanging off, but no discernable payload, a senior administration official said.
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Feb. 13: Recovery efforts resumed after being postponed because of bad weather.
Category | News & Politics |
Sensitivity | Normal - Content that is suitable for ages 16 and over |
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