Canada has placed four Chinese monitoring devices just 186 miles away from the US coast, near a major waterway used by a US nuclear submarine base, reports SCMP. The sensors were placed on the Endeavour segment of the Juan de Fuca Ridge by a remote controlled Canadian Coast Guard submersible on June 27, and are now fully operational.
The instruments, which use hi-tech sensors to monitor the underwater environment, are connected to the Ocean Network Canada (ONC), a grid of marine observatories stretching from the northeast Pacific to the Arctic. While the network is operated by the University of Victoria in British Columbia, its four new additions are the property of the Sanya Institute of Deep-sea Science and Engineering, a unit of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, which also developed and built them. -SCMP
Data from the sensors can be streamed in real-time to the Chinese institute's control center in the city of Sanya, located on the island province of Hainan.
While there is no indication that the devices will be used to spy on the United States, both Canada and Beijing have refused to say what they're for, while the US State Department said it had "nothing to say" on the matter.
What is known is that information collected by the devices will help Chinese marine scientists better understand the environment of a strategic waterway close to the United States, and get a close look at the structure and operation of one of the world’s largest and most advanced underwater observatories.
While there is no evidence to suggest China’s military is involved with the project – there is also no suggestion the devices can be used to track submarines or other vessels – maritime environmental data is equally valuable to both civilian and non-civilian researchers.
Some Chinese government research websites have suggested the positioning of the monitoring devices could be a precursor to China building its own network in the region. -SCMP
ONC is primarily a research facility, however it does maintain a defense contract with the Canadian military monitor Arctic waters using an AI-powered surveillance system, according to state broadcaster CBC.
"Deep sea observation networks are highly sensitive, and closely related to national security," says Chen Hongqiao - a researcher for...Read More HERE
Destroy them NOW
ReplyDeleteOr develop a plan to destroy them in moment if we need to. Maybe put some hardware in place.
ReplyDeleteWhen I read that headline, I thought it was a system for monitoring the Chinese, not a Chinese system for monitoring us. Such great neighbors and allies we have to the north.
Seems to me there was a big earthquake there the other day. Didn't get much press being offshore and not causing a tsunami.
I live, literally, across the road from what was the local base for this operation. Dang! I had no idea what is going on under my very nose; from where I sit all there is to see at the moment is a very thick fog, but on a clear day I see the Juan de Fuca, Port Angeles and Olympic Mtns.
ReplyDeleteKnowing this activity is coming from the Esquimalt Base, I can tell you now that up-Island is nicknamed the Chinese doorway to Canada, the city of Nanaimo in particular. (I have noticed the corner stores previously owned by Chinese are now owned by Syrians and other minorities as the Chinese wealth has filtered down to more of them.)
Just sayin. Not a PEEP in the local rags about this. But then, this is Canada.
The scary thing is, almost all of Chinese businesses are owned by the PLA, the Peoples Liberation Army. The term Industrial Military Complex aptly describes business in China. This is their Military monitoring our Military with Canadian Help. How many states can we make out of Canada?
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