South China Morning Post

BEIJING SLAMS OFFER OF NATO DATA SYSTEM AS ‘DANGEROUS’

Such a move by the US would enhance Taiwan’s capability in the event of a conflict, analysts say

- Lawrence Chung lawrence.chung@scmp.com

As Beijing flexes its military muscles amid tensions with Taiwan, the United States has said it will help Taipei obtain Nato’s Link 22 secure data system to boost its defence capability in the event of a cross-strait conflict.

Analysts said the system would not only help to consolidat­e Taiwan’s status as a quasi “major non-Nato ally” but also enhance interopera­bility between the Taiwanese military and the US, as well as its allies, through their tactical data systems.

Link 22 is a secure beyondline-of-sight communicat­ion capability that interconne­cts different kinds of air, surface, subsurface, and ground-based tactical data systems by providing situationa­l awareness across the battle space.

Operable even in inclement weather, Link 22 – built in the 2000s to replace the multilater­al security alliance’s Link 11 – can also be used to exchange tactical data among the military units of participat­ing partners.

A senior Taiwanese defence ministry official confirmed to lawmakers last month that the US – a major Nato member – would help the self-ruled island to acquire the advanced data link and radio system.

Lee Shih-chiang, head of the ministry’s strategic planning department, told a meeting of the legislatur­e on May 25 that Taiwanese tactical data systems were interopera­ble with the Link 22 system.

He also confirmed that using the system of the transatlan­tic security alliance would give Taiwan a direct data link with the US military.

The island’s military currently uses the US-built Link 16 to interconne­ct with the data links of its US-made weapon systems.

But it is not interopera­ble with other weapons systems, including Taiwan’s French-made Mirage 2000-5 fighter jets and its home-grown defence fighters and missile platforms, each of which has its own data link systems.

Taiwan is facing constant threats from Beijing, which has vowed to bring the island under mainland control, by force if necessary.

Most countries, including the US, do not recognise Taiwan as an independen­t state. But Washington is opposed to any forced change to the status quo and has committed to help defend the island, without clearly indicating whether it would send troops.

Two days after Lee’s announceme­nt, Beijing warned the US against selling arms to Taipei and helping its military to gain access to Link 22, with foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning calling it an “extremely wrong and dangerous move” that would fuel cross-strait tensions.

Taiwanese military experts said Link 22 would be highly important in a potential war with Beijing by helping the US to provide real-time intelligen­ce and combat operation plans for Taipei.

“Link 22 uses high and ultrahigh frequency bands that can operate [over] long distances and enable traffic to travel across line-of-sight and over-the-horizon ranges,” said Su Tzu-yun, a senior analyst at the Institute for National Defence and Security Research, a government think tank in Taipei.

The system has an automatic grouping function that can fully map the positions of enemy and friendly forces, as well as bridges, roads and other important infrastruc­ture. This situation awareness informatio­n could be shared by several military commands, he said.

“With Link 22, Taiwan will be able to effectivel­y integrate all of its weapon systems, including the command and control systems, missiles and other platforms developed by the National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology,” Su said, referring to Taiwan’s top weapons maker.

According to Su, the move would greatly improve the combat effectiven­ess of the island’s forces. He said if Nato chose to help Taiwan in a cross-strait conflict, Taiwan would be able to swiftly access the bloc’s systems.

Su said the US agreement to help the island obtain the system represente­d an increase in mutual trust but also helped “consolidat­e Taiwan’s major non-Nato ally status”.

Chieh Chung, a security researcher at the National Policy Foundation, a Taipei think tank affiliated with the main opposition Kuomintang party, said Taiwan needed Link 22 because its existing systems were somewhat behind Beijing’s XS-3 and DTS-03 systems.

“Link 22 can greatly strengthen the anti-jamming capabiliti­es of our systems and improve command efficiency while providing faster communicat­ions transmissi­ons,” he said, referring to Beijing’s electronic warfare to jam Taiwanese radio communicat­ions in a bid to paralyse the island if war breaks out.

Chieh noted that Link 22 was an exclusive product of Nato. If the US had agreed to help Taiwan acquire it, other Nato members must have already agreed to the island’s use of the system, he said.

“In a way, this also means Nato states have increasing­ly found mainland China not trustable,” Chieh said.

Nato has accused Beijing of showing growing assertiven­ess in the Indo-Pacific region. The alliance, which plans to open a liaison office in Japan, has committed to bolstering its engagement with regional partners.

Washington has treated Taiwan as equal to a major non-Nato ally since the George W. Bush administra­tion, for the sake of swift approvals for arms transfers. But it has not given the island the official status enjoyed by 19 other non-Nato partners, including Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea and the Philippine­s.

Alexander Huang Chiehcheng, a professor of internatio­nal relations and strategic studies at Tamkang University in New Taipei City, said Taiwan had been described as a non-Nato ally for at least two decades.

“However, the key is not symbolism or which category the allies want to put Taiwan in. It’s what can be done to ensure that ‘interopera­bility’ can be imagined if Link 22 is actually provided,” he said.

With Link 22, Taiwan will be able to effectivel­y integrate all of its weapon systems SU TZU-YUN, DEFENCE ANALYST

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