Well, since China and Taiwan are already technically one country. I don't really see how you can have a technical unification. If there is any kind of unification, it would be like the one with Hong Kong.FuManChu said:Taiwan already has Block A/B jets. The reason it wants C/D block is for the increased capability. It would rather defeat the purpose of the order if it could only get more of what it has already. Also I can't see how numbers could be reduced to the point where Taiwan would still want them and Beijing would be happy.
Besides, Washington would have known China was going to object. It wouldn't have authorised the sale in the first place if it was concerned about what Beijing thought.
I actually asked about missiles on another board and someone said they were confident there would be more sold as part of the new order. Perhaps more info will be released in the future as to numbers and specific type.
It would rather depend on the terms of unification. It may well be that it's a "technical" unification to save face for Beijing, rather than anything huge changing in areas other than trade/immigration. In which case China wouldn't be able to have an inspection detailed enough to learn anything useful.
But really, let's wait and see the whole detail of the deal.