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China Government The Military United States

China Says It Will Return the Underwater Drone It Seized From the US (thehill.com) 199

An anonymous reader quotes The Hill: China said Saturday it will return the unmanned U.S. drone it seized in the South China Sea, calling the issue "hyped up" by the U.S. "Upon confirming that the device was a U.S. underwater drone, the Chinese side decided to transfer it to the U.S. side in an appropriate manner," said the spokesman for the Chinese Defense Ministry, Sr. Col. Yang Yujun, according to CNN. "China and the United States have been communicating about this process. It is inappropriate -- and unhelpful for a resolution -- that the U.S. has unilaterally hyped up the issue. We express our regret over that."
A Defense Ministry spokesman added that China opposes U.S. "surveillance and military surveys in waters facing China...and demands the U.S. cease such activities. China will stay alert over relevant U.S. activities and will take necessary measures to counter them."
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China Says It Will Return the Underwater Drone It Seized From the US

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  • Returned in a box (Score:5, Insightful)

    by p51d007 ( 656414 ) on Saturday December 17, 2016 @01:44PM (#53503651)
    Happens all the time. In the 70's, a Mig25 landed in Japan, pilot defected with the plane, and "owners manual". Russia was hopping mad and wanted it back, and they did...in a big box ;) I'm sure the US underwater drone, by the time it is returned will have been photographed, scanned, dismantled and every ounce of anything copied. It's how it works.
    • I'm sure the US underwater drone, by the time it is returned will have been photographed, scanned, dismantled and every ounce of anything copied. It's how it works.

      As if. Why wouldn't they just use the original blueprints they probably stole several times over by now?

    • by guises ( 2423402 )
      It's a research drone - all it does is collect oceanographic data. Yes it's launched from a military ship, but that doesn't mean there's anything to be gained by dismantling it.

      Okay, maybe the Chinese suspected something different. It's possible they thought that this was secretly something special, but we know better now: the fact that we're hearing about this at all means that it was just a mundane instrument.
      • There IS technology there.

        My father was an oceanographer in the 1970's who dropped current meters into the ocean all over the world.

        The Russians would collect them all the time and dissect them.

        There be chips and instruments and all sorts of thingies in them there things, and not all of it is "off the shelf".

    • A defector bring a gift, isn't the same as swooping in and grabbing something from it's rightful owners, especially with them right there.

      They probably just downloaded it's data and were annoyed that all it had were current and temp readings, or something equally oceanographic, but not very espionage oriented.
  • Confucious say (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rick Zeman ( 15628 ) on Saturday December 17, 2016 @01:45PM (#53503661)

    "It is inappropriate -- and unhelpful for a resolution -- that the U.S. has unilaterally hyped up the issue. We express our regret over that.""

    They express regret over the US being upset at their actions. Umm, okay.

    • It's the diplomatic equivalent of "I'm sorry you feel that way." Or "sorry, not sorry."
    • I guess they were hoping the US ship would open fire on them for their act of piracy so they could really fire up the crocodile tears. But since that didn't happen, they only get to whine about us calling them for doing something illegal and stupid.
  • by stoicio ( 710327 ) on Saturday December 17, 2016 @01:45PM (#53503665) Journal

    -parts photographed
    -boards xrayed
    -wiring logged
    -systems exported to solidworks for analysis

    We should have it back to you some time in April.

    Signed China

    • They'll still only get it 70% right, but it'll cost 10% as much to produce.

    • Who the hell designs a secret drone WITHOUT a self-destruct button?!

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Errr...it wasn't a secret done. The U.S. Navy, get this, does research on ocean currents, salinity, etc. The only thing secret about it is that you didn't know the Navy used them.

    • -new unit tests highlight previous unidentified bugs - fixed now

      -oil changed

      -tires rotated and balanced

      -improved drone returned to the ocean

    • This isn't some super-sophisticated robot submarine designed to spy on underwater Chinese communications (not that you could - EM signals only penetrate a few mm in seawater anyway). It's an underwater glider. It doesn't even have a motor. It moves by changing its density to alternately sink or rise, using its wings to convert that into forward motion - usually less than 1 knot. The electronics wake up every few seconds, measure the pressure to determine its depth, chirp the sonar to measure the distanc
  • by hackingbear ( 988354 ) on Saturday December 17, 2016 @01:49PM (#53503697)

    If you read the Chinese news report [sina.com.cn], the statement says it "seize the unknown object because it posed safety concern to the passing sea traffic". Of course, it is an excuse. But given we use the excuse of "freedom of navigation" to intrude within the 12 nm of their claimed island, it is a fair game.

    • 'Freedom of navigation' is not an excuse, it's a centuries old diplomatic principle.

      It's still all colored by realpolitik. If the Chinese had a first rate navy things would be different. As it is, they are just posing for domestic consumption. It could all be different in 20 more years, but first the Chinese need to survive their economic bubble. I'm pretty confident that members of the Chinese central committee have real numbers in front of them and know they could be hanging from light posts in things

      • So is "traffic safety concern" a long time principle, no?

        That's what principles are good for -- excuses.

        Nobody would use morally/politically cause as excuse.

  • by mveloso ( 325617 ) on Saturday December 17, 2016 @01:57PM (#53503743)

    So we stole a drone and you freak out. I mean, we already stole islands and you did nothing. Why would you care about a drone?

  • by trailerparkcassanova ( 469342 ) on Saturday December 17, 2016 @03:43PM (#53504263)
    Early next month you'll be able to pick one up on Aliexpress.
  • Well they though that it is a spy drone to track Chinese submarines in the area. Therefore they took it and looked inside. They did not find the drone advanced enough for a detailed study or there was not enough evidence in the drone to support claim that it is designed to spy submarines. Blunder. The drone really can be claimed to be a research device and it is not very advanced. So they return it and try to cover their mistake by complaining that US went public about their stealing.
  • Subsequent drones should just have their anti-tampering system wired to a bunch of claymores.

    I don't for a moment believe that this was as innocuous as the US purports, but then China's actions in the S China Sea are bullshittery of the highest order and need to be directly countered. The US should build an island there, too, PRECISELY like China is.

    • Start the anchor points with oil rigs refitted to be battlestations?
      Great for hollywood, but not all that realistic in the real world.
      Hmmm... I should put that in one of my games... heheheh
  • I immediately thought of ARTEMIS, the current autonomous robotic exploration crafty working under the ice shelves in Antarctica. However, I'm sure this drone is far more primitive than whatever finally gets sent off-world.
    • Actually you're pretty off topic there, but our space probes tend to be build with OLD technology because it's had massive amounts of testing over time in extremely hostile conditions. Not something the new tech has the advantage of. When dealing with sending stuff out there where it will never have a service call, you want the best chance of not having component failures. I believe I saw an article where NASA said that they tend to build those things with 20+ year old electronics, despite them really wanti
  • "Don't mind all its identical manufactured in china friends.."

  • Or made-in-china.com for 1/3 the price of the US version.

  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Sunday December 18, 2016 @12:02AM (#53506153) Homepage

    If we found a Chinese drone within a few hundred miles of Los Angeles, you KNOW we would pick it up and turn it into an incident. What they are doing is no different. It's a risk we take deploying drones near other countries.

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