Taiwan and US in talks for sale of advanced military drones, sources say
- American SeaGuardian aerial vehicles would dramatically extend the range of the island’s fleet, expanding capacity to peer into mainland China
- Deal requires congressional approval and it is not clear if permission would include weaponry
The SeaGuardian surveillance drones have a range of 6,000 nautical miles, far greater than the 160 nautical mile-range of Taiwan’s existing fleet of drones, potentially giving the island greater capacity to peer into mainland China, observing its air force, missiles and other facilities.
The deal must be approved by members of Congress, who might receive formal notification as soon as next month, two of the people said. Congress could block a final agreement.
Such a sale would most likely anger Beijing, which claims Taiwan as its own territory.
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Republican and Democratic US senators introduced legislation on Thursday that would block the export, transfer or trade of many advanced drones to countries that are not close US allies. Sales would be allowed to Nato members, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, Japan and Israel.
A deal with Taiwan would be the first drone sale after President Donald Trump’s administration moved ahead with its plan to sell more drones to more countries by reinterpreting an international arms control agreement called the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR).
Taiwan’s defence ministry declined to comment.
In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin repeated his country’s opposition to US arms sales to Taiwan, saying Washington should stop them to prevent damage to bilateral ties.
Taiwan submitted its request to buy armed drones early this year, one of the people familiar with the talks said. The United States last week sent Taiwan the pricing and availability data for the deal, a key step that denotes official approval to advance the sale. It is, however, non-binding and could be reversed.
A deal for the four drones, ground stations, spares, training and support could be worth around US$600 million using previous sales as a guide. There could also be options for more units in the future, one of the people said.
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Taiwan unveiled its largest defence spending increase in more than a decade last year. President Tsai Ing-wen has made defence modernisation a priority, including building new submarines and upgrading Taiwan’s F-16 fighter fleet.
Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring the democratic island under its control and has denounced the Trump administration’s increased support for Taiwan.
The mainland military’s sophisticated air defences could likely shoot down a handful of drones, according to Bonnie Glaser, the director of the China Power Project at CSIS, a Washington think tank. But she still expects “China to scream about even the smallest arms sale that the US makes to Taiwan because any sale challenges the ‘One China’ principle”.
“They get particularly agitated if they think it’s an offensive capability,” Glaser said, adding that she expected the Trump administration to be less cautious than its predecessors.
A State Department spokesman would not “comment on or confirm proposed defence sales or transfers until they have been formally notified to Congress”.
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Currently, the Taiwanese government has a fleet of 26 Albatross drones made by Taiwan’s National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology, a quasi-defence ministry research agency. The drones can fly 160 nautical miles, or half that distance before returning to base, according to records At the Bard Centre for the Study of the Drone.
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems’ SeaGuardian has an airframe that can carry weapons – but only if contractually allowed by the US government.
The United States sold France unarmed MQ-9 Reapers which are similar to SeaGuardians, and later gave permission to arm them.
Last year, the United States approved a potential sale to Taiwan of 108 General Dynamics Corp M1A2 Abrams tanks worth around US$2 billion as well as anti-tank and anti-aircraft munitions. A separate sale of 66 Lockheed Martin-made fighter jets also made it through the State Department’s process.
In recent weeks, Beijing said it would sanction Lockheed Martin for involvement in the latest US arms sale to Taiwan.