On January 28, the Subaru-Asahi Star Camera, which livestreams images from the Subaru Telescope on Hawaii’s Mauna Kea, caught images of a shower of green laser beams lasting just seconds.
The beams were not, as originally thought, from a NASA satellite. They could have come from only one source: China’s Daqi-1/AEMS satellite.
Why was China lasering a dormant volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii?
Fisher notes that green lasers can be used to measure seabeds. “It is likely that China,” he says, “has been seeking to develop compact but more powerful green lasers that can conduct underwater surveillance, perhaps anti-submarine and anti-mine missions, from space.”
January 28, perhaps coincidentally, is the day that China’s now-infamous spy balloon entered Alaskan airspace, in the Aleutians. In its eight-day flight across the U.S. and Canada, the craft got a good look at two legs of America’s “Nuclear Triad,” its nuclear deterrent force.
The balloon, carrying what appeared to be surveillance equipment, crossed into the lower 48 states on January 31. Before a U.S. Air Force F-22 shot it down on February 4 off Myrtle Beach, the maneuverable balloon surveilled, among other facilities, Malmstrom, F. E. Warren, and Minot Air Force Bases, which house all of America’s Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles.
The balloon also passed close to Whiteman Air Force Base, home to the nuclear-capable B-2 bomber fleet, the second leg of the Triad.
Most ominously, the craft flew close by Offutt Air Force Base, the headquarters of Strategic Command, which controls all U.S. nuclear weapons.
Combined with the green lasers collecting atmospheric data useful for a strike by a hypersonic glide vehicle on Hawaii, American defense planners should be alarmed.
“The Americans, meanwhile, are completely left behind,” Weichert stated. “Our lack of decisive, coordinated response to these threats — or our willingness to readily cover the events up — further diminished deterrence, as China now believes it can get away with such behavior.”
Deterrence is being eroded as China’s Communist Party is fast mobilizing all society for war. This preparation means, among other things, that it is dangerous to assume that China’s January 28 laser shower was for civilian purposes only.
“No, it’s not a risk to Hawaii or anyplace else, too,” said the University of Hawaii’s Roy Gal.
Yes, nobody on the ground was burned by the green Chinese beams of light on January 28, but the laser shower is another warning that war is on the way.
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