Congress Floats Ways to Secure Skies After Chinese Balloon

Congress Floats Ways to Secure Skies After Chinese Balloon

As the only current U.S. senator to have visited space, Mark Kelly knows something about unexplained objects in the skies.

Back in his aviator days, Kelly saw Mylar party balloons fly by his cockpit. And once when he was piloting a NASA aircraft, he spotted an object at roughly 45,000 feet — much higher than commercial airplanes fly — that he couldn’t identify by sight.

 

Congress Floats Ways to Secure Skies After Chinese Balloon

Congress Floats Ways to Secure Skies After Chinese Balloon

North Korea Nuclear Reactor Resumes Operations

A nuclear reactor in North Korea that closed from December…
Congress Floats Ways to Secure Skies After Chinese Balloon

China Will Soon Surpass Russia as Nuclear Threat

China, in the midst of a rapid nuclear weapons buildup, will…
Congress Floats Ways to Secure Skies After Chinese Balloon

Afghanistan Explosions: 12 U.S. Service Members Killed in Kabul Airport Blast, 15 Wounded, Officials Say

A suicide bomb attack Thursday outside the Abbey Gate at Kabul's…