Taiwan Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

D

Deleted member 675

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According to Bryan at the CDF, and he is a staunch as an advocate for Taiwan as you can find, 90%. Discussing things with him, he seems more about military issues than you do, no offense.

I don't take offence - I've talked to him on occasion and found he knows a great deal.

Does not seem like the PAC 3 or the Orions is that big deal to me, though they add to the defense no matter what.

I didn't coin the term - that's how the three were generally referred to after 2001.
 
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Taiwan's Legislature approved the island's 2008 defense budget Thursday, including a long-delayed allocation for three sets of U.S.-made Patriot III missiles, a lawmaker said.

Also included was a New Taiwan dollar 2 billion (US$61.5 million; €44.4 million) allocation for a study to evaluate the feasibility of acquiring American-made diesel submarines, said Lin Yu-fang of the main opposition Nationalist Party.

Legislative officials put the total value of the defense budget at NT$341.4 billion (US$10.5 billion; €7.3 billion) — a 12 percent increase from 2007.

Approval of the Patriot missile acquisition and the feasibility study had been held up for more than two years by the Nationalists, who argued the expenditure could consign Taiwan to a no-win arms race with rival China.

The party indicated a change of heart at a preliminary hearing on the defense budget last week, but did not give a reason for it.

Lin said the Nationalists could support the allocation of another three sets of Patriot III missiles following presidential elections in March.

Details of the cost of the Patriot systems were not made public, but when the government first proposed their acquisition, it cited a figure of NT$145 billion (US$4.5 billion; €3.1 billion) for six systems.

Taiwan and the mainland split amid civil war in 1949, but Beijing continues to see the island as part of its territory. It has threatened to attack if Taiwan moves to formalize its de facto independence.

The Patriot systems and submarines are part of a US$16 billion (€11 billion) U.S. arms package that President Chen Shui-bian's administration wants to acquire to counter an ambitious Chinese arms buildup begun more than 10 years ago.

Earlier this year the Legislature approved the purchase of 12 American-made P-3 submarine hunting aircraft, the third element in the U.S. package.

Apparently a further US$100 million was set aside that could be approved for the submarines later on in the year. Funds were also made available for the F-16 (some frozen), AGM-84 and Apache purchases. The HF-IIE project was also kept going (some funds frozen).
 
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Taiwan wants submarines. Its legislature has now passed a defense budget that includes the first dollars the island has decided to spend on a modern underwater fleet.

There is a strong chance that Groton's Electric Boat could benefit from those dollars, because Taiwan's new submarines would be designed and made in America, and this submarine builder is anxious to bid on the work -- as long as the U.S. Navy says it's OK.

Taiwan has set aside an initial $62 million to start a design and building process that could result in an eight-boat diesel-electric fleet -- a weapons deal that is strongly resisted by China, which considers Taiwan a rogue province that China will one day reclaim. The United States is Taiwan's chief protector and weapons supplier, and the only submarine-building country apparently willing to make such a deal against China's wishes.

The concept for the eight-boat deal emerged in 2001, when President Bush announced a significant defensive weapons package for Taiwan, though years have passed in which Taiwan's leaders have debated the expensive arrangement. The decision had become highly politicized, and the final compromise so far includes less money than the estimated full cost of a design for the new subs.

These submarines would be powered by diesel and batteries. If they are assembled in America, it would mark the first time U.S. submarine builders have built subs for a foreign navy. It would also be the first time they have worked on diesel-powered subs since the 1950s birth of the nuclear-powered fleet. Diesel-electric submarines are smaller than their nuclear cousins and are able to stay underwater for much shorter periods.

Electric Boat officials have said the company won't bid for the work, which would be coordinated through the Pentagon, until it receives confirmation that its primary customer -- the U.S. Navy -- doesn't mind. But if it gets the nod, the company is eager to work on a new generation of diesels. The Department of Defense has indicated as recently as last year that it still intends to honor the 2001 presidential offer if Taiwan comes up with the money.

On Thursday, Taiwan's Legislative Yuan passed the bill, which also pays for Patriot missiles and sets aside a further $105 million for submarines. The Taiwanese administration would have to ask for that additional money from the legislature.

It's unclear how or when the initial $62 million for submarines will be spent. Some Taiwanese legislators have reportedly referred to it as "feasibility study" funding, but Justin Bernier, who heads Connecticut's military liaison office, said the money is more than that.

"The politics in Taiwan sometimes confuses the message," he said Thursday. "What's clear is that this funding will go toward the beginning of a design."
 
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
I swear Fu..you must know someone on the "inside" of the ROC government...

Looks like dreams do come true..Now the SSK subs will no longer be a dream but a reality!
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
Far from it. Remember in the past, the US canceled proposals by foreign countries to buy diesel subs made in the US after seriously entertaining these proposals which reached to the highest levels. The list includes Australia, Greece, Israel, and South Korea. Each has reached or past the same stage where the legislature has granted funds approval leaving the ball in the US court. Tentative agreements have in fact been reached with several companies.

But in the end, guess what happened. Norman Polmar has some details in his book, Cold War Submarines.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
True Crobato..However ..was ADM H.Rickover in charge of the USN Nuke sub program when those decisions were made? If so he was the common denominator of those decisons. With ADM. Ricover now deceased let us see how the US side SSK decision goes.
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
True Crobato..However ..was ADM H.Rickover in charge of the USN Nuke sub program when those decisions were made? If so he was the common denominator of those decisons. With ADM. Ricover now deceased let us see how the US side SSK decision goes.

No. Rickover had long since died when those decisions were made. Remember he died in 1982, and about everyone of those diesel sub decisions were made long after he was gone. Rickover sure has plenty of top level disciples and clones, but more importantly he has many more disciples of the way he fights his budget wars.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
No. Rickover had long since died when those decisions were made. Remember he died in 1982, and about everyone of those diesel sub decisions were made long after he was gone. Rickover sure has plenty of top level disciples and clones, but more importantly he has many more disciples of the way he fights his budget wars.

Thanks..I learn something new everyday...

We all will just have to wait and see what finally happens with these ROCN SSKs..to be built and designed in the US.
 
D

Deleted member 675

Guest
We all will just have to wait and see what finally happens with these ROCN SSKs.. to be built and designed in the US.

Taiwan's isolation is a special card it can play in this matter. Countries like Australia, Greece and South Korea had various options open - at the very least they could get direct technological assistance when making their own, if not have them made for them by France, Germany, etc.

On the other hand Taiwan can only rely on the US if it doesn't want to risk throwing good money after bad on a local build. If Washington backtracks on its promise then it's arguable whether it might have ever helped Taiwan if attacked by China (which is a crucial chance, even not a certainty). On the other hand if it really wants Taiwan to have a credible defence (and avoid the need for it to get involved) then the Pentagon and White House will ensure that it holds up its side of the deal.

A good indication of how things may go is whether Electric Boat are given the nod (whether in private or public) to undertake part/all of the R&D. Though other companies would bid for the work, Electric Boat not being able to take part could demonstrate a hostility that would cause severe delays, if not total failure. On the other hand, if it can participate then things are looking quite reasonable.
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
The isolation card has been there since 2001. But the USN knows about this from the start and even up to now, hasn't given an approval sign.

The fear is that if the US starts building diesel subs again, the USN may be forced by congressional pressure, to buy diesel subs. That's why the USN does not even BUY diesel subs from Germany, Sweden, etchetera, for its own Red Flag Aggressor purposes. Everyone knows that to win the budget battles, you need to always present only the most expensive foot forward. For NASA it is the space shuttle. For the USAF, the F-22. For the USN, the AEGIS destroyers and the nuclear subs. You can't let them show a chink in your armor, because one thing leads to another.

It seems pretty okay for the USN to completely lose the post war export sub market, which has sold well over 50 submarines, a large portion of which were Type 209 and to Germany's pockets, just to hold this all nuclear sub position. Losing the Seawolf class in the budget war is a big blow to the Navy, they're going to lay the line down on the Virginia class.

The nuclear submariners can easily show reasons blocking the ROC sub sale. One the 8 subs probably won't matter much, the ports would be so blockaded anyway and so deeply outnumbered by the PRC subs they won't stand a chance anyway. More Virginia class subs stationed in the West Pacific like Guam or Okinawa would present a much better chance for Taiwan's defense. Second, Taiwan herself is not considered an entity that is well trusted and there are many that believe that sharing technology to Taiwan means eventually passing it to the PRC itself. Part of this distrust also has a streak of racism in it, and this distrust pops up in matters like the Wen Ho Lee case.

In any case this leads to a counter alternative, that providing if allowed, the USN is going to pour through the new diesel sub design to make sure certain classified technologies are not going to be passed to Taiwan, and these are the secret "stuff" for the sonar, sensors and most of all the quieting technologies. The end result is that the new sub won't really perform that well, despite the marketing and mouth hype. The downgrade will also serve the nuclear faction well, because the sub's performance won't be a threat to nuclear submarines, and the USN will keep its Virginia sub budget.
 
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