Exclusive: Taiwan considering multi-billion dollar arms purchase from US, sources say (www.reuters.com)
from HellsBelle@sh.itjust.works to world@lemmy.world on 17 Feb 18:03
https://sh.itjust.works/post/32974366

Taiwan is exploring buying arms worth billions of dollars from the United States, sources briefed on the matter said, hoping to win support from the new Trump administration as China continues to apply military pressure on the island.

Three sources familiar with the situation, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity given the sensitivity of the situation, told Reuters that Taiwan is in talks with Washington.

The package is meant to demonstrate to the United States that Taiwan is committed to its defense, one of the sources said.

A second source said the package would include coastal defense cruise missiles and HIMARS rockets.

#world

threaded - newest

PugJesus@lemmy.world on 17 Feb 18:19 next collapse

Suppose they should do it soon, before Trump takes a bigger bribe from China to reverse course.

Xanthobilly@lemmy.world on 17 Feb 18:34 collapse

Yah, I’m thinking it’s already too late.

Foni@lemm.ee on 17 Feb 18:57 next collapse

Of course, because the new American administration has proven to be a reliable ally. They can foresee Europe and Ukraine

chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world on 17 Feb 20:33 collapse

Buy the weapons now so you don’t have to beg for them when you’re under attack. If you’ve got the money then it makes perfect sense.

Taiwan should really be smart about which weapons they buy though. Anti-air systems and anti-ship mines as well as drones are what they need. Fancy jets are not cost effective for defence.

Foni@lemm.ee on 17 Feb 21:07 collapse

Good luck with supplies, maintenance and spare parts

chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world on 17 Feb 21:08 collapse

They can always trade the US some chips for them!

meowmeowbeanz@sh.itjust.works on 17 Feb 20:44 collapse

The geopolitical theater never disappoints. Taiwan’s proposed $8B arms deal with the U.S. is a desperate hedge against China’s relentless saber-rattling, but let’s not pretend this isn’t transactional patriotism. Trump’s tariff threats on semiconductors clash comically with his admin’s military posturing—a duality that reeks of profit-driven pragmatism, not principled alliances.

Removing the “no support for independence” phrasing from State Dept docs is a symbolic win for Taiwan, yet it’s empty calories without binding guarantees. Beijing’s “reunification” dogma remains unchanged, and Taiwan’s defense upgrades are just buying time before the next provocation.

The real tragedy? Taiwan’s semiconductor sovereignty is now a bargaining chip. Washington’s fixation on reshoring chip production undermines the island’s economic leverage, reducing its defense to a pawn in America’s tariff wars. Autonomy? More like managed decline.

Greene staying as top U.S. diplomat in Taipei offers continuity, but continuity in ambiguity. Democracy’s broken when survival hinges on parsing diplomatic fine print.