For over a week, US corporate media have been captivated by a so-called “Chinese spy balloon,” raising the specter of espionage.
NBC News (2/2/23), the Washington Post (2/2/23) and CNN (2/3/23), among countless others, breathlessly cautioned readers that a high-altitude device hovering over the US may have been launched by China in order to collect “sensitive information.” Local news stations (e.g., WDBO, 2/2/23) marveled at its supposed dimensions: “the size of three school buses”! Reuters (2/3/23) waxed fantastical, telling readers that a witness in Montana thought the balloon “might have been a star or UFO.”

As time went on, headlines’ certainty that this was a “spy balloon” or “surveillance balloon” only increased (NBC, 2/9/23).
While comically sinister, the term “Chinese spy balloon”—which corporate media of all stripes swiftly embraced—is partially accurate, at least regarding the device’s provenance; Chinese officials promptly confirmed that the balloon did, indeed, come from China.
What’s less certain is the balloon’s purpose. A Pentagon official, without evidence, stated in a press briefing (2/2/23) that “clearly the intent of this balloon is for surveillance,” but hedged the claim with the following:
We assess that this balloon has limited additive value from an intelligence collection perspective. But we are taking steps, nevertheless, to protect against foreign intelligence collection of sensitive information.
Soon after, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ website (2/3/23) stated that the balloon “is of a civilian nature, used for scientific research such as meteorology,” according to a Google translation. “The airship,” the ministry continued, “seriously deviated from the scheduled route.”
Parroting the Pentagon
Despite this uncertainty, US media overwhelmingly interpreted the Pentagon’s conjecture as fact. The New York Times (2/2/23) reported that “the United States has detected what it says is a Chinese surveillance balloon,” only to call the device “the spy balloon”—without attributive language—within the same article. Similar evolution happened at CNBC, where the description shifted from “suspected Chinese spy balloon” (2/6/23) to simply “Chinese spy balloon” (2/6/23). The Guardian once bothered to place “spy balloon” in quotation marks (2/5/23), but soon abandoned that punctuation (2/6/23).
Given that media had no proof of either explanation, it might stand to reason that outlets would give each possibility—spy balloon vs. weather balloon—equal attention. Yet media were far more interested in lending credence to the US’s official narrative than to that of China.

Of course, governments have also been using balloons to track weather for more than a century—but that didn’t merit a New York Times article (2/3/23).
In coverage following the initial reports, media devoted much more time to speculating on the possibility of espionage than of scientific research. The New York Times (2/3/23), for instance, educated readers about the centuries-long wartime uses of surveillance balloons. Similar pieces ran at The Hill (2/3/23), Reuters (2/2/23) and the Guardian (2/3/23). Curiously, none of these outlets sought to provide an equivalent exploration of the history of weather balloons after the Chinese Foreign Affairs statement, despite the common and well-established use of balloons for meteorological purposes.
Even information that could discredit the “spy balloon” theory was used to bolster it. Citing the Pentagon, outlets almost universally acknowledged that any surveillance capacity of the balloon would be limited. This fact apparently didn’t merit reconsideration of the “spy balloon” theory; instead, it was treated as evidence that China was an espionage amateur. As NPR’s Geoff Brumfiel (2/3/23) stated:
The Pentagon says it believes this spy balloon doesn’t significantly improve China’s ability to gather intelligence with its satellites.
One of Brumfiel’s guests, a US professor of international studies, called the balloon a “floating intelligence failure,” adding that China would only learn, in Brumfiel’s words, at most “a little bit” from the balloon. That this might make it less likely to be a spy balloon and more likely, as China said, a weather balloon did not seem to occur to NPR.
Reuters (2/4/23), meanwhile, called the use of the balloon “a bold but clumsy espionage tactic.” Among its uncritically quoted “security expert” sources: former White House national security adviser and inveterate hawk John Bolton, who scoffed at the balloon for its ostensibly low-tech capabilities.
Minimizing US provocation
The unstated premise of much of this coverage was that the US was minding its own business when China encroached upon it–an attitude hard to square with the US’s own history of spying. Perhaps it’s for this reason that media opted not to pay that history much heed.

CNN (2/4/23) acknowledged that China and the US “have a long history of spying on each other”—but thought its audience only needed to know details about China spying on the US.
In one example, CNN (2/4/23) published a retrospective headlined “A Look at China’s History of Spying in the US.” The piece conceded that the US had spied on China, but, in line with the headline’s framing, wasn’t too interested in the specifics. Despite CNN‘s lack of curiosity, plenty of documentation of US spying on China and elsewhere exists. Starting in 2010, according to the New York Times (5/20/17), China dismantled CIA espionage operations within the country.
And as FAIR contributor Ari Paul wrote for Counterpunch (2/7/23):
The US sent a naval destroyer past Chinese controlled islands last year (AP, 7/13/22) and the Chinese military confronted a similar US vessel in the same location a year before (AP, 7/12/21). The AP (3/21/22) even embedded two reporters aboard a US “Navy reconnaissance aircraft that flew near Chinese-held outposts in the South China Sea’s Spratly archipelago,” dramatically reporting on Chinese military build up in the area as well as multiple warnings “by Chinese callers” that the Navy plan had “illegally entered what they said was China’s territory and ordered the plane to move away.”
The US military has also invested in its own spy balloon technology. In 2019, the Pentagon was testing “mass surveillance balloons across the US,” as the Guardian (8/2/19) put it. The tests were commissioned by SOUTHCOM, a US military organ that conducts surveillance of Central and South American countries, ostensibly for intercepting drug-trafficking operations. Three years later, Politico (7/5/22) reported that “the Pentagon has spent about $3.8 million on balloon projects, and plans to spend $27.1 million in fiscal year 2023,” adding that the balloons “may help track and deter hypersonic weapons being developed by China and Russia.”
In this climate, it came as no surprise when the US deployed an F-22 fighter jet to shoot down the balloon off the Atlantic coast (Reuters, 2/4/23). Soon after, media were abuzz with news of China’s “threat[ening]” and “confrontational” reaction (AP, 2/5/23; Bloomberg, 2/5/23), casting China as the chief aggressor.
Perpetuating Cold War hostilities
Since news of the balloon broke, US animus toward China, already at historic highs, has climbed even further.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken postponed a trip to China. President Biden made a thinly veiled reference to the balloon as a national security breach in his February 7 State of the Union address, declaring, “If China threatens our sovereignty, we will act to protect our country.” Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, Democratic ranking member of the newly formed House Select Committee on China, asserted that “the threat is real from the Chinese Communist Party.”
Rather than questioning this saber-rattling, US media have dispensed panicked spin-offs of the original story (Politico, 2/5/23; Washington Post, 2/7/23; New York Times, 2/8/23), ensuring that the balloon saga, no matter how much diplomatic decay ensues, lasts as long as possible.
Featured image: Creative Commons photo of the Chinese balloon by Chase Doak.





I love how you accuse the mainstream media of “parroting the Pentagon” while you parrot Chinese propaganda. A Chinese balloon has been reported floating over South America; Another weather baloon, maybe?
I hate how you parrot US corporate media propaganda about spy balloons. So what if it is one? US governments have been surveilling most of the planet since at least the 1960s, including illegal domestic surveillance by the CIA. Isn’t it a tiny bit of pot calling kettle, with this?
LOL thanks for demonstrating the effectiveness of this Pentagon and other anti-China propaganda. Your comment literally proves the point of the article that it deigns to criticize.
This truth is yet to be told. The reporting smells. The media pattern of misleading has been on display for quite some time.
Ms. Tveten has an independent, competent brain. Thanks
Ms. Tveten is competent ? Funny as I never have seen anyone here on Fair.com cite credible, squeaky clean sources. “Let’s go President Xi” and his little brother (Supreme Leader Lol) Kim Jong-un !!
Translation: Because FAIR accurately and objectively calls out US corporate media biases and falsehoods on China, they’re actually spreading Chinese propaganda.
Another great example of just how effective the propaganda really is. You probably don’t even understand its breadth or scope but it has wormed its way into your subconscious and it oozes out via comments like this one.
Does this author actually believe the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affair’s statement that the balloon “is of a civilian nature, used for scientific research such as meteorology” Seriously ???? Give me a break and cut it out.
Does Ms. Kinery have any factual basis for disbelieving the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs? Factual – something more than “they’re Chinese!”
Check out the CCP’s Miliary-Civil Fusion Policy.
Joe Biden is so incompetent, its possible, he gave the order to shoot down the Goodyear blimp.
In other news, it was reported that a 10 year child doesn’t know why his birthday balloon went missing.
Funny. Did anyone else catch the 20 minute PBS interview with Biden and Judy Woodruff on YouTube yesterday? Pretty scary to think this man is actually running the country.
What should embarrass us all a little bit is that so many of our fellow Americans are stupid enough to swallow the U.S, government’s hate propaganda that China, which obviously has drones and satellites, would send a balloon to gather militarily meaningful data.
Oh, so you think – and indeed buy into – China’s propaganda that the balloon is a series of weather related instrument’s? So much for critical analysis and skepticism. Listen, I have a bridge to sell to you pal !
Oh look! It has an antenna. It must be intercepting communications. It also has solar panels that could power surveillance equipment so it’s a spy balloon!
What is your complaint? That China surveils the USA? You might want to learn how China, the USA and Russia have been surveilling each other since the 1960s. If one of their balloons drifted over the USA, how many times a day do US military satellites overfly Chinese territory? And as for US citizens: they are not safe from their own agencies:
“The Central Intelligence Agency has secretly been running mass surveillance operations to collect data on Americans, according to a newly published letter written by Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.).
Wyden and Henrich, both members of the Senate Intelligence Committee, wrote the letter in April 2021, and the letter was partly declassified on Thursday.”
https://fee.org/articles/6-things-we-know-about-the-cia-s-secret-mass-surveillance-program/
You do realize that other countries that don’t like when the US surveils them take counter-measures to react and respond to it, right? Drones get shot down. Satellite signals get jammed. Spies are investigated and arrested, etc.
It make very little sense to argue, “The US surveillance program is expansive, so therefore China can do whatever it wants and nobody can complain about it.”
And meanwhile corporate media is completely silent about the exposé about the sabotage of the Nord Stream pipeline.
The Chinese balloon incident ignited a hysteria of protecting our sovereignty and airspace. Here’s one explanation explaining the small “UFO” shot down over Alaska.
https://www.moonofalabama.org/2023/02/why-the-airforce-shot-down-a-us-weather-balloon.html
If true, would be embarrassing and I doubt our gvmt would admit and MSN would report.
a balloon for weather only