The top Republican and Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee on Feb. 12 expressed their concerns over how the Biden administration has communicated with Congress over shooting down aerial objects.
Chairman Mike Turner (R-Ohio) said the administration needs to provide timely briefings for lawmakers.
“What we’re seeing here is a number of announcements by the administration without any real information being given to Congress,” Turner continued. “This could be because they don’t have any information. From the press conference we saw, it does seem like they took this action without a real understanding for what they were going after.”
Turner suggested that there should be more engagement between the Biden administration and Congress.
“Probably they’re a little hesitant after the Chinese balloon fiasco, where they let it go across the country, to great criticism, bipartisan and bicameral criticism from Congress,” Turner added.
Separately, Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.), the committee’s ranking member, expressed concern about the Biden administration not being “more forthcoming” about the objects shot down over Alaska and Canada’s Yukon territory.
Himes added that the Gang of Eight—the four congressional leaders from the House and Senate and the chairs and ranking members of the House and Senate Select Committees on Intelligence—got a “very extensive briefing” on the Chinese spy balloon.
“Then subsequently, the entire Congress got a top-secret briefing on it. So we’re pretty good on that one,” Himes said. “Since then, of course, there’s been the shoot down over Alaska and the shoot down over the Yukon. Congress has been out of session, and so we have not been directly briefed on that.”
Incidents
The Chinese spy balloon, which had flown over the continental United States for days while passing near several U.S. military bases, was shot down by a U.S. fighter jet off the South Carolina coast on Feb. 4.Several lawmakers from Michigan quickly responded to the shooting over the lake.
“We need the facts about where they are originating from, what their purpose is, and why their frequency is increasing,” Dingell continued. “Our national security is of the utmost importance, and we must work in a bipartisan way with this Administration and all relevant partners for answers and the appropriate reaction.”
China
House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.), in an interview with ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday, said China’s communist regime poses a threat to the United States more than just spy balloons.“We’ve got a whole lot bigger problem with China than the spy balloons,” Comer said. “Their military continues to grow and expand.”
“China continues to steal our intellectual property. They continue to steal our patents. They manipulate their currency,” Comer added. “We believe they have a big footprint in academia with a massive spy ring within our research universities where they continue to steal our hard-earned research and development.”
Comer also criticized the Biden administration for allowing the Chinese spy balloon to transit the United States for days.
“So China is a problem. And this administration thus far hasn’t set a very good example of standing up to China. I think that, you know, shooting the balloon down in the Atlantic once it flew over all the military bases, including my own Fort Campbell, Kentucky, it’s very disturbing.”