Editorial | US-China talks must stay on course despite dispute over balloon
- Whatever the nature of the flight, the incident threatens to derail efforts both sides have put into improving fraught bilateral relations

Having blown up into a crisis, the China-United States balloon dispute continues to spiral out of control when it needs to come back to earth. Depending on which side you believe, the Chinese balloon shot down by the US was either on a meteorological mission, or a covert surveillance operation that crossed airspace boundaries.
The latter may resonate with time-honoured intelligence gathering on the ground by agents and diplomats, but hardly belongs to a world of cyber espionage and spy satellites. That said, it threatens to derail efforts both sides have put into improving fraught bilateral relations, prompting the US to scrap a visit to Beijing by its top diplomat, which Beijing insisted had never been fixed anyway.
Meanwhile, China has accused the US of more than 10 high-altitude balloon violations while the US complains of misinformation and says it has shot down three more objects.
Thankfully, officials say they are more likely to have served commercial purposes than espionage. Whatever the conflicting versions, hopefully, in the long term, the fallout need not undermine an understanding between the two countries’ leaders.
On the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit last November, presidents Xi Jinping and Joe Biden agreed to reinstate channels for diplomatic dialogue and form working groups on mutual concerns. That makes room for voices of reason to be heard, and it is worth safeguarding.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, after all, has not ruled out visiting Beijing. As former Singapore foreign minister George Yeo has said, it will be time to worry if the breach does not heal within a few months.

