Taiwan Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Blitzo

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
Seeking to develop a 22000 ton LHD would be an... "interesting" choice for use of the ROC military's resources. Even their Navy's aim to develop a new four ship class of aegis type destroyers is interesting to say the least.
 

Blackstone

Brigadier
PRC seems to be adopting "new language" on Taiwan, but quite frankly I don't see much substantive difference from the old language. The part in bold sums things up, and it was always thus. Nothing new at all.

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BEIJING (Reuters) - China will formulate "new language" towards relations with self-ruled Taiwan when the ruling Communist Party holds a key congress later this year, a senior Chinese official said on Friday, holding out hope for an improvement in strained ties.

China has heaped pressure on Taiwan, which Beijing views as a breakaway province, since Tsai Ing-wen of the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party won a presidential election last year, cutting off a formal dialogue mechanism and taking two of its diplomatic allies in Africa.

China is deeply suspicious of Tsai, suspecting she wants to push for the island's formal independence, a red line for Beijing, though she says she wants to maintain peace with China.

Speaking on the sidelines of the annual meeting of China's largely rubber-stamp parliament, Wang Yifu, president of the official All-China Federation of Taiwan Compatriots, said he had always been optimistic about relations with Taiwan.

"I hope cross Taiwan Straits relations will start to warm ... after the new language regarding cross Taiwan Straits in the work report of the 19th congress of the Communist Party," said Wang, who holds a rank equivalent to a cabinet minister, without elaborating.

The once-every-five-years congress is China's most important political event of the year, when a new generation of senior leaders will be ushered in, though President Xi Jinping will remain in office.

Wang is a member of the Chinese-appointed Taiwan delegation to parliament, made up of defectors, their descendents and others who trace their roots to Taiwan, to support China's position that the island is theirs.

Proudly democratic Taiwan has shown no interest in wanting to be ruled by autocratic China and its people have no say in who China decides are its representatives at China's parliament.

Wang warned that if Taiwan formally declared independence it would "bring catastrophic harm" to the island.

Defeated Nationalist forces fled to Taiwan at the end of a civil war with the Communists in 1949. China has never renounced the use of force to bring it under Beijing's control.

Zhang Zhijun, head of China's Taiwan Affairs Office, told parliament's Taiwan delegation this week that the end of the road of Taiwan independence is unification.

"It wasn't tough talk, but the inescapable truth," said Wang, whose ancestry is Taiwanese but was born in China in 1950.

China will resolutely oppose and contain Taiwan independence, Premier Li Keqiang on Sunday at the opening of parliament.

Chinese jets and warships carried out exercises near Taiwan and into the Western Pacific last week, as Taiwan's defense minister warned of a growing threat from its giant neighbor.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
It had been planned for a long time

Taiwan takes possession of two US frigates


The US signed over two decommissioned Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates to Taiwan last week, which are scheduled to enter the navy’s service by the end of May.

The vessels were signed over on Thursday at a ceremony in Charleston, South Carolina, attended by Commander of the Navy Admiral Huang Shu-kuang (黃曙光), Representative to the US Stanley Kao (高碩泰) and unnamed US officials.

The event was a deliberately low-key affair, purportedly in a bid to avoid provoking diplomatic conflict, particularly with China.

The Ministry of National Defense refused to comment on the transfer, but Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Tsai Shih-ying (蔡適應) yesterday confirmed the handover.

The navy dispatched a team of officers to the US to receive training in how to operate the frigates and the vessels would be sailed to Taiwan either jointly or separately, depending on the progress of the training, with both vessels expected to arrive within two months, Tsai said.

“The two frigates have been retrofitted to extend their service lives by about 30 years, making them a highly cost-effective option for the navy,” Tsai said.

The USS Taylor and the USS Gary were in service between 1984 and 2015. They were purchased for a total of about NT$5.5 billion (US$177.21 million) making them substantially cheaper than Taiwan-made Cheng Kung-class frigates — the design of which is based on Perry-class frigates — which cost up to NT$17 billion each.

The US Navy began to deploy Perry-class guided missile frigates in the 1970s and 1980s. The US built 51 of the frigates for its navy and authorized its allies to build them. Eight such frigates have been built in Taiwan.

Despite calls to rename the two vessels after naval heroes, the two frigates have been named the Mingchuan after Qing Dynasty Taiwan governor Liu Ming-chuan (劉銘傳) and the Fengjia after poet Chiu Feng-jia (丘逢甲), who led the resistance against Japan following the Qing Dynasty’s cession of Taiwan to Japan.

In related news, Huang is scheduled to have meetings with high-level US officials, likely from the White House and the Pentagon, although details of the meetings were not revealed, Tsai said.

Huang is the first high-level Taiwanese military official to visit the US following the passage of the US National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017, which for the first time included a section on senior military exchanges with Taiwan.

“Huang is not the first and will not be the last high-level official visiting the US…. I believe there will be military exchanges involving higher-level officials in the near future,” including the minister of national defense and the chief of general staff, reflecting closer defense ties between the two nations, Tsai said.

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at first I noticed as Breaking News at gazeta.ru (
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Trump administration crafting big new arms sales to Taiwan - sources
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The Trump administration is crafting a big new arms package for Taiwan that could include advanced rocket systems and anti-ship missiles to defend against China, U.S. officials said, a deal sure to anger Beijing.

The package is expected to be significantly larger than one that was shelved at the end of the Obama administration, the officials told Reuters on the eve of a visit to Beijing by U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

"The political desire is there to do a substantial sale," one administration official said, adding that internal deliberations had begun on a deal "that's much stronger, much more significant than the one that was not accepted by the Obama people."

President Donald Trump's administration is eager to proceed with the sales, but it is expected to take months and possibly into next year for the White House to overcome obstacles, including concern that Beijing's sensitivities over Taiwan could make it harder to secure cooperation on priorities such as reining in North Korea, the official said.

Completion of a package also could be held up by the slow pace at which the Trump administration is filling national security jobs, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because initial work toward new arms sales has not been made public.

Discussions between Taiwan and the new administration already have begun, according to a person in Taipei familiar with the matter.

The White House declined comment.

Details of the administration's approach to Taiwan emerged as Tillerson was due to visit China this weekend, where he will seek more Chinese support on North Korea and firm up a first meeting between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping expected next month.

In December, President Barack Obama's administration put the brakes on a Taiwan deal under discussion. That package was worth $1 billion, Washington's Free Beacon newspaper reported this week, citing unnamed officials, who also were quoted as saying the Trump administration was now preparing new sales.

Ned Price, a National Security Council spokesman under Obama, said the previous administration put a "relatively modest" arms package for Taiwan on hold, in part to let the new administration make the decision.

The Trump administration source told Reuters that the new deals under consideration would likely top the $1 billion mark.

The new administration plans to focus more than the previous one on enhancing Taiwan's "asymmetric" capabilities, possibly with advanced multiple launch rocket systems, anti-ship missiles and other technologies that would enable Taiwan's military to defend against a much larger Chinese force in the event of an attack, the U.S. official said.

Lockheed Martin Corp is the top U.S. manufacturer of multiple launch rocket systems. Other foreign companies involved in the sector include Germany’s Diehl and Britain’s BAE Systems .

A $1.83 billion arms sale to Taiwan that Obama announced in December 2015, to China's dismay, included two Navy frigates in addition to anti-tank missiles and amphibious attack vehicles.

The United States switched diplomatic recognition from Taiwan to China in 1979, acknowledging Taiwan as part of “one China.” But successive administrations have continued providing billions of dollars in arms as part of a congressionally mandated requirement to ensure the island can defend itself.

Taiwan has already been a major point of contention between Trump and China, which considers the island a renegade province.

As president-elect, Trump broke with protocol and accepted a congratulatory phone call from the Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen in December, angering China. He then suggested he might abandon Washington's "one China" policy, which accepts the self-ruled island as part of China. Once in office, Trump reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to the decades-old policy.

The White House is mindful that tensions could flare again over new arms sales. But some Trump aides insist they are needed to make clear that the United States, Taiwan's sole arms supplier, is committed to upgrading the island's defences.
 

Skywatcher

Captain
Considering how ridiculously cheap the current budget is ($11.4 billion)*, and Tsai's delusional plans to build a 4++ fighter, SSKs, long range LACMs a LHD, and AAW DDGs on that sort of money, it's looking like the relationship of Taiwan's defense planning with reality is going in the direction of those Iranian stealth fighter concepts and combat readiness...

*To add to the madness, they're saying that they're going magically increase it by 50% next year (don't ask me how they're going to magic up that 1% of GDP).mm
 
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