(ORDO NEWS) — It looks like the United States and China are playing a game of balloons and rockets, with the UFO theme somewhere in between.
The whole world is now talking about the spy balloon that made its way from China to the continental United States.
In the end, after it flew over the country, the US military decided to shoot down the alleged spy balloon. They successfully completed this task and sent teams to collect the wreckage.
China denied that the object was for espionage purposes, saying it was a meteorological balloon that had gone off course.
After the fall of the Chinese balloon, many people soberly realized that espionage still exists in the 21st century. But the amazing thing is how the government handled this whole situation.
As if the game of spying had been invented recently, and as if no one had ever spied on anyone before. But in fact, countries have been spying on each other for longer than most of us think.
What is most surprising is that some Pentagon officials were struck with such amazement after the discovery of the Chinese balloon.
And somewhere between tangled bureaucracy, diplomatic tensions, the Super Bowl, balloons and rockets, the UFO theme continues to exist.
Spy games
So far, the military has shot down four different objects that violated US airspace. So far, we have confused information about the exact nature of these objects.
There is conflicting information, and this is not surprising. According to some reports, all four objects were meteorological balloons.
In that case, one should probably ask why balloons, and is it really the most advanced technology that countries use in the 21st century to spy on each other?
Let’s face it, this is not the most convenient way to spy on your neighbor.
Both China and the US have technological capabilities that allow them to spy on each other without sending out balloons that are visible from tens of kilometers away.
The key to espionage is to do it in such a way that the other side does not notice that they are being spied on.
So why balloons? Have governments cut the budgets of their spy agencies that much?
Most likely no. Most likely, now we are seeing how the military is increasingly aware that such methods are used today.
In fact, China has accused the United States of violating its airspace at least ten times by launching spy balloons into the country.
So, if both countries have used spy balloons in the past and continue to use them today, then what are the pilots shooting at? Do they shoot balloons? And if so, why now and not earlier?
UFO
Are we really shooting balloons or launching rockets with technology that doesn’t come from this planet?
Curiously, not only did the United States shoot down four unidentified flying objects, but China recently reported that it had shot down a UFO in its airspace.
So what are China and the US shooting at? Do they shoot down each other’s spy balloons? Or is it about something bigger and more complex?
On February 12, 2023, the US Air Force reported that they shot down an octagonal aircraft that violated the country’s airspace. What kind of object it was remains a mystery, and the reports of the pilots vary.
Previously, pilots involved in shooting down some UFOs reported that the objects had no visible means of propulsion, the objects lacked propellers, wings, and other such characteristics.
This description is eerily similar to a UFO-like object that was intercepted by US Navy fighter jets called the “Tic-Tac”.
Are these objects top secret technology? Or are these objects something that does not belong to our planet?
While the answer to this question remains a mystery that many of us are eager to unravel, we know that UFO reports have skyrocketed in recent years. This is likely due to the fact that now that agencies such as NASA and the Pentagon are actively investigating this phenomenon, UFOs are less stigmatized.
According to CNN, “UFO sightings increased significantly between March 2021 and August 2022, during which 247 new sightings were reported, mostly by pilots and personnel of the US Navy and Air Force.”
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