GnuRadio RF: Captures US Comms Shootdown Of Luft Balloon Enemies
All hail your $Billions in obsolete, misallocated, and hopelessly overpriced and entrenched Military Industrial Complex rape of your families wallets... ps: China spends $10k and gets 50 missiles, not $500k on one (that missed, thus you wasted 2x = $1M+++ to hit a toy balloon). And F-35's and F-22's are full of bugs and recalls. Audio Of US Fighter Pilot Who Shot Down Chinese Spy Balloon Reveals Lake Huron Strategy https://www.theepochtimes.com/audio-of-us-fighter-pilot-who-shot-down-chines... https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/the-operation-to-down-chinas-spy-ballo... https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/f-22-shoots-down-chinese-spy-balloon-o... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Luke Audio recordings of radio chatter taken during the United States’ shoot down of a Chinese spy balloon earlier this month may provide insights into how the military later shot down an unidentified object over Lake Huron. A U.S. F-22 Raptor fighter flies during an aerial display at Farnborough Airshow, Hampshire, on July 14, 2008. (Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images) In over 20 minutes of radio chatter, U.S. pilots and ground teams can be heard discussing their approach and shoot down of the Chinese spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina. The audio was captured by aviation radio enthusiast Ken Harrell and first published by The Drive. The Air Force declined to share its own audio files but confirmed the authenticity of the recordings to The Epoch Times. In one exchange, the lead fighter pilot and his wingman can both be heard preparing their missiles to fire on the balloon, suggesting that the wingman was prepared to take down the balloon immediately following a failed attempt by the lead pilot. The primary players you will see in the transcript and hear in the audio are: FRANK01 is the lead F-22 that took the kill shot. FRANK02 is its wingman. As we reported Saturday, those call signs were an homage to World War One flying ace and U.S. Army Air Service First Lieutenant Frank Luke Jr, a Medal of Honor recipient better known as the "Arizona Balloon Buster" who destroyed 14 German balloons and four aircraft. HUNTRESS is the U.S. Air Force's Eastern Air Defense Sector, or EADS, part of the U.S.-Canadian North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), which was controlling the operation from the ground in Rome, New York. EAGLE01 is an F-15C and EAGLE02 is its wingman. The Eagles backed-up the F-22s and used their SNIPER targeting pods to record the shootdown and mark areas of debris for recovery. TIGER09 is a Navy P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft. TOI is Target Of Interest, in this case the Chinese spy balloon. Author's notes are seen in italics. -The Drive “FRANK01 is switches hot,” the lead pilot says. “FREANK02 is switches hot,” the wingman follows. The two F-22 stealth fighters’ call signs, FRANK01 and FRANK02, were named after World War I flying ace Frank Luke Jr., who earned the epithet of “Arizona Balloon Buster” for his successful shootdowns of 14 German balloons during the conflict. Notably, the brief exchange may reveal exactly what happened during the United States shoot down of an unidentified object over Lake Huron on Feb. 12. During that encounter, the lead pilot fired an AIM-9X missile at the object, the same type of missile used on the Chinese spy balloon and two other unidentified objects this month. In one portion of the recording, an F-15C pilot can be heard expressing frustration over actually locking onto the balloon. "I’m having trouble keeping a radar lock for any more than a second on him," said the pilot, adding "I will keep trying." Read the entire transcript here via The Drive.
Anyone with a few $10k RF rigs could probably do better at discriminating silly retroreflectors on luftballoons than all these $10B++ militaries steal from you and waste on it. Volunteer arrays linked via internet at 1/500 cost or less. Ukraine Shoots Down 'Decoy' Russian Balloons As Moldova, Romania Report High-Altitude Objects https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-64661145 Following last week's balloon shootdown incidents over the United States, there have been a slew of fresh reports involving high-altitude balloon activity over eastern Europe, including incidents involving objects over Moldova, Romania, as well as potential 'weaponized' balloons over Ukraine. "Ukraine's army has said Russia fired 36 cruise missiles on Thursday, a day after six apparently radar-reflecting balloons were spotted over Kyiv," BBC reports. Ukraine authorities have said the balloon activity is related to a change in Russian tactics, which have of late included sending wind-propelled reflective balloons over the capital and other cities in order to provoke an anti-air response. Illustrative: A Russian military high-altitude balloon being launched. Source: The Drive/TV ZVEZDA "These objects could carry radar reflectors and certain reconnaissance equipment," Ukrainian air force spokesman Yurii Ihnat said. "The balloons were launched to detect and exhaust our air defense forces." The military further described that most balloons had been shot down, and they are intentionally designed to be picked up on radar as decoys. "Balloons with reflectors have also been spotted over the eastern region of Dnipropetrovsk in recent days," BBC continues, also referencing photographs which surfaced on social media in recent days. Tiny Moldova was among those earlier this week to close its airspace due to an unidentified object, now believed to be a balloon, and Romania even scrambled fighter jets in response to "an object resembling a weather balloon was spotted at a height of around 11,000 ft (3,350m)," according to official statements. In a briefing, Romania's defense ministry said the object wasn't a threat upon closer review, and the it had "characteristics similar to a weather balloon" - but had been picked up on radar and warranted investigation. Via Telegram: deflated balloon tied to a reflector, believed used by the Russian military to trigger Ukrainian air defense. The dispatched jets had surveyed the area for about 30 minutes, but "did not confirm the presence of the aerial target, neither visually nor on the onboard radars," and afterward returned to base without incident, defense officials said.
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