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After all, the mysterious metal sphere that washed up on a beach in Japan causing fear among the locals may just be a common piece of marine equipment.
The orb, roughly 5 feet (1.5 m) in diameter, washed up on Enshu beach in the Pacific coastal city of Hamamatsu this week, forcing beachgoers to evacuate and leaving authorities clueless as to how to stop it. What was it and where was it from?
But the ball bears a striking resemblance to a steel buoy made by the Chinese shipbuilding company Nantong Yangfan, made in similar sizes and used to guide sailors or mark positions in the ocean.
The company is based in China’s eastern coastal province of Jiangsu and supports arguments that the buoy simply broke off and floated east towards Japan.
Nantong Yangfan is a marine equipment company based in the east coast region of Jiangsu.
The balls, called ‘steel floats’, are used to mark certain points in the ocean for boaters.
A mysterious metal sphere has washed up on a beach in Japan, leaving locals and Japanese authorities with no idea of its origin or purpose.
Japanese authorities quickly deployed bomb disposal squads to the shoreline amid initial fears it could be a sea mine.
On Tuesday, Japanese authorities deployed bomb disposal squads to the shoreline amid initial fears it could be a sea mine.
They built a 600-foot perimeter around the scene and blocked public access.
But an X-ray of the object revealed that its rusty metal shell was simply a casing, with the interior hollowed out.
There was no indication it was a surveillance or spy device deployed by close enemies China and North Korea.
After the initial panic ended, some theorized that the sphere was a mooring buoy, given the raised handle that could be used to hook a rope, which had become detached and floated.
These metallic buoys often contain more components within the outer shell to aid buoyancy, and not everything supported the theory.
The shell appears to be colored a slight yellow shade, with brown spots probably caused by oxidation.
On-site investigators took several photos of the sphere and said they had forwarded the images to the coast guard and military for further inspection and examination.
Locals interviewed by Japanese broadcaster NHK said they had also inspected the object and then had no idea what it was.
“I tried to push it but it wouldn’t budge,” a man told NHK.
Despite the researchers’ insistence that the orb was not of Chinese origin, there were still concerns about the object’s provenance amid recent tensions between Tokyo and Beijing.
Following the shooting down of a suspected Chinese spy balloon by the United States, Japanese authorities said last week they planned to clarify the rules of military engagement to allow their warplanes to shoot down drones violating their airspace.
The shell appears to be colored a slight yellow shade, with brown spots probably caused by oxidation. Japanese authorities have yet to determine what the object is.
The orb, which measures approximately 5 feet in diameter, washed up on Enshu Beach in the Pacific coastal city of Hamamatsu.
The suspected Chinese spy balloon drifts into the ocean after being shot down off the coast of Surfside Beach, South Carolina, USA, on February 4, 2023.
Yesterday, in the first formal security talks of the Asian powers in four years, Tokyo took aim at Beijing’s military ties with Russia and its alleged use of spy balloons in Japanese skies.
The talks, aimed at easing tensions between the world’s second and third-largest economies, came as Tokyo worries Beijing will use force to seize control of Taiwan following Russia’s attack on Ukraine, potentially it would trigger a conflict that could involve Japan and China. disrupt world trade.
Japan said in December it would double defense spending over the next five years to 2 percent of gross domestic product, a total of $320 billion, to discourage China from resorting to military action.
Beijing, which increased defense spending by 7.1 percent last year, spends more than four times as much as Japan on its forces.
“While Japan-China relations have many possibilities, we also face many problems and concerns,” Japan’s Vice Foreign Minister Shigeo Yamada told his Chinese counterpart.
He pointed to their territorial dispute over uninhabited islands in the East China Sea known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, Beijing’s recent joint military exercises with Moscow and alleged Chinese surveillance balloons sighted over Japan at least three times since 2019.