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FAA closes airspace over Montana due to Department of Defense activity

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) temporarily shut down airspace over part of Montana for Defense Department activities after another airborne “object” was spotted, officials said.

Montana Rep. Matt Rosedale said that the object could “interfere with commercial air traffic” and that he was told by military officials that “the DOD will resume efforts to observe and ground the object in the morning.” He gave no details as to what it was.

The FAA issued a notice around 5:30 p.m. Saturday banning flights in an area about 50 by 50 nautical miles around Havre, Montana, close to the Canadian border. 

It classified the area as “national defense airspace,” before the FAA reopened the airspace a short time later.

The FAA could not confirm whether it was in response to another balloon or another foreign object violating US airspace.

“I am in direct contact with NORCOM and monitoring the latest issue over Havre and the northern border,” Rosendale tweeted. “Airspace is closed due to an object that could interfere with commercial air traffic — the DOD will resume efforts to observe and ground the object in the morning.”


A Chinese balloon was shot down over the Atlantic last week.
Chad Fish/AP

A similar action was issued last week after a Chinese surveillance balloon was spotted over Montana as it crossed the entire North American continent before it was shot down in the Atlantic Ocean off the South Carolina coast on Feb. 4.

The alert comes as the US shot down a separate “unidentified object” over Canada Saturday, which violated the nation’s airspace earlier in the day.

With Post Wires



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