That’s a reach. We knew where it tracked, so it wasn’t hard to know what it videoed or snapped pictures of. We know it tracked over our missile sites and ICBM fields. Unless it tracked over any military sites, it didn’t get much more. The damn thing should have been shot down as soon as it was spotted. Someone fell asleep at NORAD. Gen. VanHerck called it a “domain awareness gap.” That’s like saying, “I don’t know.”
How far do you think if we flew a balloon over Russia or China, our balloon would have got? Maybe a half mile? Even though the U.S. does not have a balloon program, it doesn’t mean we aren’t collecting data from these and other countries using covert or clandestine methods. This is another reason why we have to track Russian and Chinese submarines. As with the U.S., they also have ballistic missiles armed and ready for firing. Have you ever seen a missile fired from a sub?
We have planes equipped with highly sophisticated digitized cameras on planes, not the planes you see at the airport, but planes like the A-12 or the SR-71. Supposedly, Grumman is manufacturing a new plane that flies even higher and faster than either of these two. We already collect a significant amount of data from our enemies. We already have N. Korea’s missile sites mapped and mist of China’s and Russia’s also. It’s the silos that are in the ground that gave been difficult to capture on video.