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Taiwan
ChinaDiplomacy

Taiwan is developing missiles in response to Beijing’s military build-up

Self-ruled island said to have deployed one set of missiles, perfected another and sped up production of a third since Tsai Ing-wen took office in 2016

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Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen (second left) listens to a brief on a missile at Suao in April. Photo: Military News Agency/AP
Associated Press

Taiwan is responding to China’s arms build-up by developing missiles and interceptors of its own that could reduce Beijing’s military advantage over the self-ruled island, defence experts say.

Since President Tsai Ing-wen took office in 2016, Taiwan has deployed one set of missiles, perfected another and sped up production of a third, the analysts say, in the latest sign of how it is handling a mainland Chinese military threat that is raising the chances of an armed confrontation.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has taken a hard line against advocates of independence for the self-governed island democracy and has sent warships, bombers and fighter planes on training missions circling the island in a show of strength.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping has taken a hard line against advocates of independence for self-ruled Taiwan. Photo: EPA-EFE
Chinese President Xi Jinping has taken a hard line against advocates of independence for self-ruled Taiwan. Photo: EPA-EFE

While Beijing has an increasingly overwhelming military advantage, Taiwan’s missile systems advance its odds of holding off mainland China in asymmetrical warfare, said Alexander Huang, a strategic studies professor at Tamkang University in Taiwan. The term refers to effective resistance of an enemy with targeted firepower rather than overwhelming force.

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“Taiwan with limited resources can only invest in the area that would create some kind of asymmetrical advantage, which would dissuade the Chinese from taking actions,” Huang said. “President Tsai has committed more or at least expressed willingness to invest more in the asymmetrical capability.”

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