( Time.com)
The U.S. announced Wednesday that it
will offer Taiwan a $5.85 billion package of upgrades to its aging fleet of
F-16 fighters and training for its pilots. The deal, which falls short of
Taiwan's request for newer F-16 C/D jets, was widely expected as
details of the plan leaked out in Washington in recent weeks. Perhaps the only
surprise was the price tag, which is more than $1 billion over some previously
reported estimates, and within the range of the $6.4 billion January 2010
package that included two Osprey mine-hunting ships, Black Hawk
helicopters and Patriot air defense missiles.
The
latest package of F-16 upgrades faces an array of opposing interests. Taiwan's
supporters in the U.S. Congress say it doesn't go far enough and have proposed
legislation that would require the sales of advanced F-16 C/Ds to Taiwan. They
argue those sales would not only help Taiwan defend itself against a rapidly
developing Chinese military, but would also provide desperately needed jobs for
American defense industry workers. Taiwan's military welcomed
the proposed deal but says it plans to continue pushing for the sale of F-16
C/Ds. China, which considers Taiwan a part of its territory that must
eventually be reunited, responded with indignation. China's Foreign Ministry
summoned recently arrived U.S. Ambassador Gary Locke to complain, and in a
statement on the ministry's website
spokesman Ma Zhaoxu called the proposal "an extreme interference in
China's internal affairs, (that) severely harms China's national security and
the cause of unification, harms Sino-U.S. relations and peace and stability in
the Taiwan Strait."
Such
a response from Beijing is to be expected. What remains unanswered is how much
further the Chinese side will go. When the 2010 offer was announced China broke
off military relations with the U.S. for nearly a year, only resuming them
ahead of President Hu Jintao's state visit to Washington this January. Will
China take such a step now, after the relationship between the two countries'
armed forces only recently resumed? The official Chinese media are airing calls
for a tough response. The People's Daily has a special page
devoted to coverage of the issue, complete with a timeline of weapons sales to
Taiwan dating to 1979 and galleries of armaments. In an interview
with the People's Daily online posted Wednesday, Major General Luo Yuan,
deputy secretary-general of China Association for Military Sciences, argued
that China should match its words with actions and follow the example of
Russia, which vowed to deploy short-range nuclear armed missiles along its
western border after the U.S. proposed developing a missile defense system in
Poland and the Czech Republic. The system, which was intended to guard against
attacks from Iran, was cancelled in 2009. "We should let Taiwan know that
what it's buying from the U.S. isn't 'safety' but 'danger' that might provoke
the mainland to use new means to maintain its military dominance and check
separatism," the People's Daily quoted Luo as saying. So far such
talk of a tougher response is simply talk, but the volume is certain to rise in
the coming days.
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