Taiwan Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Mr T

Senior Member
Huh, hadn't predicted JSOW and HARM being sold in this package. Interesting. Then again, I spoke Taiwan has already developed missiles like the Wan Chien, so selling the other options isn't as big as it would have been say 5 years ago.

So it's basically black mailing China by arming it's enemy into doing what the US wants

I don't think there's any point trying to predict what Trump is thinking. It could be pressure on China or it could be a realisation that China isn't going to push North Korea as hard as the US wants, so why bother holding off on arms sales to Taiwan.

even though North Korea is no more dangerous than the US regime changing all across the Middle East?

Given that North Korea has nuclear weapons and keeps talking about smashing its neighbours, I would say it is of very great concern.
 

Mr T

Senior Member
NK is less well armed than its neighbours and uses nukes as a deterrent. NK is not suicidal.

And yet there's not one country in the region that's comfortable with North Korea having nuclear weapons - China, Russia, South Korea, Japan, the US, they all want NK to ditch the nukes.

Anyway, this is a thread about Taiwan, not North Korea. Take it to one of the many threads on Korea and nuclear proliferation.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
And yet there's not one country in the region that's comfortable with North Korea having nuclear weapons - China, Russia, South Korea, Japan, the US, they all want NK to ditch the nukes.

Anyway, this is a thread about Taiwan, not North Korea. Take it to one of the many threads on Korea and nuclear proliferation.

Than Israel needs to ditch their nukes as well. None her neighbors are comfortable as well.
 
Friday at 7:28 PM
LOL I was faster than DefenseNews Today at 8:28 AM

US clears arms deal for Taiwan worth up to $1.3B

source:
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and China Demands Trump Administration Cancel Arms Sale to Taiwan
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China protested Friday the Trump administration’s $1.4 billion arms sale to Taiwan as a violation of its sovereignty and demanded that the deal be cancelled.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Lu Kang said the sale ran counter to China’s vital security interests and would be a gross violation of the stated commitment by the U.S. to a “one China” policy.

“We stress that nobody could sway our determination to uphold our territorial integrity and sovereignty,” Lu said at a regular daily briefing. “We oppose any external interference in our internal affairs.”

Lu’s remarks were aimed at the $1.42 billion sale of arms to Taiwan announced Thursday by the U.S. State Department.

The package reportedly included technical support for early warning radar, anti-radiation missiles, torpedoes and components for SM-2 (Standard Missile-2) missiles, one of the
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primary anti-air weapons. The sales also included
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Joint Standoff air-to-surface missiles.

In announcing the deal, State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said that the sale did not violate the Taiwan Relations Act that governs U.S. contacts with the island off China’s coast formerly known as Formosa.

“It shows, we believe, our support for Taiwan’s ability to maintain a sufficient self-defense policy,” Nauert said, adding that “There’s no change, I should point out, to our ‘one-China policy.'”

The last U.S. arms sale to Taiwan, approved during the Obama administration in December 2015, was worth $1.8 billion and included two de-commissioned
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, minesweepers, Stinger missiles, and anti-armor and anti-tank missiles.

The State Department and the Pentagon had approved another $1 billion arms sale in December of 2016 similar to the one signed Thursday, but President Barack Obama held off on final approval to allow the incoming Trump administration make the decision.

China considers Taiwan to be part of its territory and has long opposed any arms sales to the self-governing island. China has a policy of eventual reunification, and has not ruled out force to achieve it.

The arms sale announcement came at an awkward time for Chinese President Xi Jinping, who was visiting Hong Kong to mark the 20th anniversary of the end of British rule.

Taiwan was also rattled by the presence in nearby waters of Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning, the only carrier in China’s growing fleet.

China announced Monday that the Liaoning, accompanied by two destroyers and a frigate, had left its homeport in Qingdao to join the Hong Kong events on a course that would take it through the Taiwan Straits.

U.S. relations with China — and the severing of formal diplomatic ties to Taiwan — were the outgrowth of President Richard Nixon’s “opening to China” in the 1970s. In 1979, President Jimmy Carter established formal relations with China.

Also in 1979, the U.S. Congress passed the Taiwan Relations Act guaranteeing U.S. support for Taiwan and aid in its self-defense. The unofficial U.S. presence in Taiwan is maintained via the American Institute in Taiwan, a private corporation which carries out informal diplomatic activities.
 

delft

Brigadier
Jura, China always demands the US cancels the sale. The US never does, so it's slightly pointless posting those news stories, because it's not actually news.
It is news today because of US talk about China helping US wrt North Korea.
 

Mr T

Senior Member
It is news today because of US talk about China helping US wrt North Korea.

That's not news either. That always happens, and the response is always the same - either China says it's doing its best, it does something interesting but short-term, or it does something not very significant. And the US is not impressed.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
the case will depend on president Trump and the congress. Trump seems like he would be happy to sell sell sell. Congress is more than happy to debate debate debate.
 
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