The Pak Banker

US pushes arms sales surge to 'Fortress Taiwan'

- WASHINGTON -APP

The United States plans to sell as many as seven major weapons systems, including mines, cruise missiles and drones to Taiwan, four people familiar with the discussion­s said, as the Trump administra­tion ramps up pressure on China.

Pursuing seven sales at once is a rare departure from years of precedent in which US military sales to the island were spaced out and carefully calibrated to minimize tensions with Beijing. But the Trump administra­tion has become more aggressive with China in 2020 and the sales would land as relations between Beijing and Washington are at their lowest point in decades over accusation­s of spying, a lingering trade war and disputes about the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

At the same time Taiwan's desire to buy weapons increased after President Tsai Ing-wen was reelected here in January and has made strengthen­ing Taiwan's defenses a top priority. Taiwan is China's most sensitive territoria­l issue. Beijing says it is a Chinese province, and has denounced the Trump administra­tion's support for the island.

Washington has been eager to create a military counterbal­ance to Chinese forces, building on an effort known within the Pentagon as "Fortress Taiwan", as Beijing's military makes increasing­ly aggressive moves in the region. The Taipei Economic and Cultural Representa­tive Office in the United States did not respond to a request for comment.

Taiwan's military is well-trained and well-equipped with mostly U.S.-made hardware, but China has a huge numerical superiorit­y and is adding advanced equipment of its own. The weapons packages from Lockheed Martin Co LMT.N, Boeing BA.N and General Atomics are moving their way through the export process, three people familiar with the status of the deals on Capitol Hill said, and a notificati­on to Congress is expected within weeks.

One industry source said President Donald Trump was slated to be briefed on the packages this week by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Some of the deals had been requested by Taiwan more than a year ago, but are only now being moved through the approval process. A State Department spokesman declined comment. A senior U.S. official, citing Chinese assertiven­ess in the Taiwan Strait, said: "There is no equilibriu­m today. It is out of balance. And I think that is dangerous."

Trump's White House has made an here effort to export weapons to U.S. allies trying to bolster their defenses, decrease dependence on U.S. troops while boosting U.S. companies and jobs. As he fights for re-election on Nov. 3, Trump and Republican supporters have ramped up their rhetoric against Beijing and sought to portray Democratic opponent Joe Biden as soft on China.

Other factors include Taiwan's bigger defense budget, and the fear in Taiwan that if Trump loses, Biden would be less willing to sell the U.S.'s most advanced weapons to them. Taiwan's interest in U.S. weapons and equipment is not new.

The island is bolstering its defenses in the face of what it sees as increasing­ly threatenin­g moves by Beijing, such as regular Chinese air force and naval exercises near Taiwan. The senior U.S. official said Taiwan's increased defense spending was a good step, but it had to do more.

"Taiwan, frankly, needs to do more in order to ensure that they indigenous­ly have an ability to deter Chinese aggression," the official said. Drones that can see over the horizon for surveillan­ce and targeting, coupled with advanced missiles and coastal defenses that include smart mines and anti-submarine capabiliti­es to impede a sea invasion, have been discussed at the highest levels to make Taiwan more difficult to attack, like a "porcupine", according to industry and congressio­nal sources.

A Lockheed Martin-made High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), essentiall­y a truckbased rocket launcher, is among the weapons Taiwan wants, people familiar with the negotiatio­ns said. Taiwan also seeks to buy sophistica­ted anti-tank missiles.

 ?? TOKYO
-REUTERS ?? Japan's newly-elected Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga stands as he was chosen as new prime minister at the Lower House of Parliament.
TOKYO -REUTERS Japan's newly-elected Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga stands as he was chosen as new prime minister at the Lower House of Parliament.

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