Cold-war lessons from China’s spy balloon
To avoid perilous misunderstanding, the two sides should talk more
There was something almost comic about the immense Chinese balloon, carrying equipment the size of a small passenger plane, that drifted over America for days until it was popped on February 4th by an American fighter jet. As cold-war-type moments go, it was light relief compared with, say, the Cuban missile crisis of 1962 or the crash-landing in 2001 of an American spyplane after a Chinese fighter collided with it. But this was no joke. America said the balloon was spying. For ordinary Americans, the threat from China was suddenly visible, overhead. In his state-of-the-union speech on February 7th, President Joe Biden warned: “make no mistake about it…if China threatens our sovereignty, we will act to protect our country. And we did.”
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Spy in the sky”
Leaders February 11th 2023
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- Arab petrostates must prepare their citizens for a post-oil future
- How to promote academic freedom in America
- Cold-war lessons from China’s spy balloon
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