Taiwan Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Damn that thing is ancient. PRC still using 69s is bad... But then I look to ROC and shake my head.

Given the international politics and historical economics around the PRC-ROC unfinished Chinese Civil War situation it's understandable how both sides still have large numbers of geriatric tanks in service. I believe the oldest models still in use in the PRC are Type 59's. The silver lining is that it is a sign that both sides have chosen better priorities for spending among their weapons as well as other than weapons.
 

timepass

Brigadier
Taiwan Is Bringing Back Cold War Missiles to Deter China..

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"Taiwan’s armed forces will rely on a missile system that was first developed nearly 60 years ago for frontline defense on their Pacific coastline against intruding Chinese aircraft.

The Taipei-based China Times revealed that the American radar- homing guided MIM-23 Hawk surface-to-air missile will soon be deployed to fend off low-flying Chinese fighters and bombers.

Launch pads and silos will be installed on key outlying territories, including Orchid Island and Green Island. The islands are strategically located on Taiwan’s southeastern coast close to routes used by the People’s Liberation Army Air Force for what Taiwan claims have been constant breaches of its airspace."

Taiwanese forces on Orchid Island will be able to intercept aircraft flying along the east coast and can also control activity in the adjacent Bashi Channel. Analysts say the Hawks can fill a defensive void and give Taiwan more leverage in a silent war of attrition with China that it seemed to be losing.

But the defense wall will be underpinned by a weapon that was first deployed by the US Army in 1959 and has not been used by any branch of the American military since 2002, though there has been a series of updates over the years. It is still in service with armed forces in Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Japan, among others.

Alex Huang, assistant professor at Tamkang University’s Institute of international Affairs and Strategic Studies, told the Hong Kong-based Ming Pao newspaper that although the missiles dated back to the Cold War era, they were still the backbone of Taiwan’s air defenses, and had undergone modifications to range, altitude and guidance systems.

The Hawks were supposed to be phased out by 2013 and replaced by Taiwan’s own Sky Bow series of surface-to-air anti-ballistic missile systems. It is not known when the changeover will now happen.

China’s state-owned media, including the Global Times and NetEase, lost no time jeering Taipei’s use of “ancient” missiles in derisory news reports. Online readers also poked fun at the missile’s limited firepower — it has a modest 54-kilogram warhead — and range of just 50 kilometers, boasting that more advanced Chinese fighters such as the J-20 could easily pierce the defensive shield.

The Hawks will have some back-up: it has been reported that batches of the highly mobile MIM-104 Patriot surface-to-air missile have also been dispatched to the eastern counties of Hualien and Taitung.


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timepass

Brigadier
Taiwan says it will beef up defense to respond to China....

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FILE - In this Jan. 30, 2018, file photo, Taiwanese soldiers move during a military exercises to show its determination to defend itself from Chinese threats, in Hualien County, eastern Taiwan. Taiwan will look to its domestic arms industry as well as foreign suppliers to respond to China's continuing military buildup, but has no interest in engaging in an arms race with its cross-strait rival, the defense ministry said Tuesday, March 6, 2018. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying, File)


"Taiwan will look to its domestic arms industry as well as foreign suppliers to respond to China's continuing military buildup, but has no interest in engaging in an arms race with its cross-strait rival, the defense ministry said Tuesday.

The remarks from spokesman Chen Chung-ji came a day after China announced an 8.1 percent rise in its military budget for this year to 1.1 trillion yuan ($173 billion), the world's second largest after the United States."

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cross-posting from F-35 Joint Strike Fighter News, Videos and pics Thread
:
Taiwan renews interest in F-35 to counter Chinese first strike
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Taiwan has flagged continued interest in the Lockheed Martin F-35 fighter jet, possibly as part of an upcoming new round of
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from the United States.

Speaking to parliament, Defense Minister Yen Teh-fa confirmed Taiwan’s long-standing interest in the F-35, although he did not mention which variant of the F-35 or how many aircraft Taiwan was interested in acquiring.

However, previous reports have said Taiwan is interested in the F-35B short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing, or STOVL, version, which is also used by the U.S Marine Corps, Italy and the United Kingdom. Japan and Singapore are also reportedly interested in this variant.

Yen said his ministry was also reviewing the possibility of acquiring the Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker midair refueling tanker. If followed through, this would be the first time Taiwan will have a dedicated midair refueling capability.

Taiwan sees the F-35B and its STOVL capabilities as a way to offset the threat of a first strike by China, allowing the island to retain the ability to generate air power in the event of its runways being disabled.

Arms sales to Taiwan have often been a fraught affair, with China ― who sees the island as a breakaway province and has not ruled out the use of force to retake it ― applying increasingly intense pressure to diplomatically isolate Taiwan.

The U.S. does, however, maintain strong de facto diplomatic relations with Taiwan’s government, and the Taiwan Relations Act enacted by Congress in 1979 commits the U.S. to “make available to Taiwan such defense articles and defense services in such quantity as may be necessary to enable Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability.”

In recent years, the most advanced U.S. weapons have been out of Taiwan’s reach so as to
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.

Taiwan’s Air Force currently operates a mix of Lockheed Martin F-16A/B Fighting Falcons, locally built AIDC F-CK-1 Ching-kuo and French Dassault Mirage 2000-5 fighters. All three types were operationalized in the mid- to late 1990s and are facing obsolescence issues. Taiwan in the midst of upgrading the former two and looking at options to upgrade the latter.

However, it wants new fighter types to counter China’s increasing military advantage over the island’s armed forces in the face of China’s rapidly modernizing military.
 

druid198405

New Member
Registered Member
There have been rumors here in Taiwan that the government was reconsidering the F35 because of its unit and maintenance cost and were instead leaning to the F15 or F18E/F NG. Mostly they were looking at the F18 because they could get them a lot faster and cheaper and because the US government were more likely going to approve that sale, but as I said these were only rumours.
 

B.I.B.

Captain
There have been rumors here in Taiwan that the government was reconsidering the F35 because of its unit and maintenance cost and were instead leaning to the F15 or F18E/F NG. Mostly they were looking at the F18 because they could get them a lot faster and cheaper and because the US government were more likely going to approve that sale, but as I said these were only rumours.
If Taiwan obtained a handful of f35's, they would npt be able to use them effectively .They would not be carrying a full fuel load because of the fear that pilots may defect to China
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
If Taiwan obtained a handful of f35's, they would npt be able to use them effectively .They would not be carrying a full fuel load because of the fear that pilots may defect to China
Bunk
It's been decades since the last defection drama on either side , and Official policy of the PRC is not to pay. Farther more there are easier ways to defect.
 

B.I.B.

Captain
If Taiwan obtained a handful of f35's, they would npt be able to use them effectively .They would not be carrying a full fuel load because of the fear that pilots may defect to China
Not about love of money but love for the mother land.Besides since when has Taiwan had a miltary Jet that China might want to take a peep.
 
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