After completing a war games exercise last month, The U.S. House China committee advanced a number of suggestions to congress. One of the recommendations is for the U.S. government to establish a weapons stockpile, to be given to Taiwan should its neighbor China choose to take the path Russia did in Ukraine.
Earlier this year, President Biden signed the National Defense Authorization Act for the 2023 fiscal year. Included in the $858 billion defense spending is $2 billion in loans to Taiwan, also specifying that the island nation may receive up to $10 billion over the next five years to modernize its armed forces. The NDAA also includes an additional $2 billion in loans to buy weapons and other military services from the United States. (Here are the US Military’s 15 Weapons of the Future.)
In order to receive the $10 billion in foreign military financing grants, the U.S. secretary of state must certify to Congress that Taiwan is increasing its own spending on the country’s defenses.
Bradley Bowman and retired Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery, writing in Defense News last June, noted the “lethargic” U.S. process of delivering military goods to Taiwan:
“Permitting this meandering and unfocused process to persist would ignore one of the most important lessons of the war in Ukraine: The United States should spend less time worrying about provoking authoritarian bullies and more time urgently helping threatened democracies before an invasion or attack begins.”
The United States and Taiwan, officially, the Republic of China, signed a mutual defense treaty in 1954 that remained in effect until 1980. In 1979, President Jimmy Carter officially established diplomatic relations with Taiwan, and Congress enacted the Taiwan Relations Act, which states that “the United States will 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.”
Carter authorized U.S. arms sales to Taiwan under the new legislation in 1979 and 1980. Taiwan was authorized to purchase 48 F-5E fighter jets, 500 air-to-ground Maverick missiles, the anti-tank BGM-71 TOW system, Hawk surface-to-air missiles, and the self-propelled Chaparral surface-to-air system. The total cost of these weapons was just over $550 million.
Not all the weapons authorized, then or now, have been delivered. In some cases, U.S. stockpiles could not be drawn down. In others, the weapons were no longer being manufactured, and in others yet, Taiwan changed its mind, as it did in August of this year. Though some figures may be different, see every airplane in Taiwan’s air force.
Here’s a look at eight major weapons systems that have recently been authorized for sale or to provide Taiwan. The list is not comprehensive and does not include activities or items needed to operate and maintain these systems.
Click here to see the weapons the U.S. sold to Taiwan.
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