What we know — and don’t know — about the objects being shot down over North America
OTTAWA — Canadians have been inundated with reports of unidentified objects being shot down by American fighter jets over the U.S. and Canada. So what do we know about what is happening — and what don’t we know?
What is going on?
You have to go back to Jan. 28: That’s when U.S. officials say they first detected an alleged Chinese spy balloon entering Alaskan airspace over the Aleutian Islands. The public only learned about the balloon’s existence a few days later when it was spotted over Montana. By that point, it had already flown through Alaska and western Canada before re-entering the U.S. That balloon, which China says was actually a weather-research balloon blown off course, was shot down off the coast of South Carolina on Feb. 4. Fast-forward to last Friday, when the U.S. announced it had shot down an “object” off the coast of Alaska. A second “object” was shot down over central Yukon on Saturday, and a third over Lake Huron on Sunday. Both countries are now working to recover the wreckage of all four.
So what are they?