Washington Is Upset Beijing Did Not Take Hotline Call After Balloon Shootdown

Shortly after canceling a planned summit between top diplomats, American officials claim China is acting irresponsibly by preventing dialog.

The Pentagon claims that Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin could not reach his Chinese counterpart shortly after an American fighter jet shot down a craft Beijing says was a weather balloon. A Department official said Chinese officials refusing to take calls on a bilateral hotline was "dangerous." Last week, Secretary of State Antony Blinked candled a planned meeting with the Chinese foreign minister after a balloon was spotted in American skies.

According to the Pentagon, Austin placed a call to Chinese Defense Minister Wei Fenghe shortly after an F-22 shot down a Chinese craft over the Atlantic Ocean. Austin attempted to reach Wei on a bilateral hotline established between the US and China.

Chinese Defense Ministry Spokesman Tan Kefei explained on Thursday that Beijing did decline the call and the US was waging an "information war." "Given that this irresponsible and seriously erroneous approach by the US did not create a proper atmosphere for dialogue and exchanges between the two militaries, China did not accept the US proposal on the phone call," he said.

He continued, "the US claims that the balloon is part of the so-called aircraft fleet. I don’t know about it. I think it may be part of the US information war against China."

Washington being upset with Beijing for being unavailable for talks is ironic as last week, America’s top diplomat scrapped high-level meetings in China. The State Department claimed it did not want Blinken’s meeting with China’s foreign minister, and potential Chinese President Xi Jinping, to be dominated by conversations about the balloon.

Assistant Secretary for Defense Ely Ratner told Congress Thursday that Beijing’s refusal to take the hotline call was "dangerous." "That’s really dangerous." He continued, And unfortunately, to date, the PLA is not answering that call."

American defense officials said the craft did not present a military threat and would be unable to collect data that Beijing cannot obtain with low-earth orbit satellites. China claimed the aircraft was a weather balloon for scientific purposes. Beijing said it regretted the balloon drifted off course.

President Joe Biden continued to downplay the event this week. On Thursday, the president stated it was "not a major breach." "It’s not a major breach. Look, the total amount of intelligence gathering that’s going on by every country around the world is overwhelming," Biden asserted in an interview.

Still, the presence of the balloon allowed many politicians and pundits to claim China was threatening Americans. On Thursday, the US House unanimously passed a resolution that condemned China for a "brazen violation" of US sovereignty. The legislation further rebuked Beijing for attempting to deceive the international community about the true purpose of its "intelligence collection campaigns."

On Wednesday, the Pentagon doubled down on its claim that the balloon was a spycraft but did not provide the American people with evidence. "The was not for civilian purposes, we are 100% clear on that," Department of Defense Spokesperson General Pat Ryder said.

On Friday, China responded sharply to the resolution. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning claimed the legislation was "political manipulation." "The resolution by the U.S. Congress was purely political manipulation and hyping up," he said.

Kyle Anzalone is the opinion editor of Antiwar.com, news editor of the Libertarian Institute, and co-host of Conflicts of Interest.