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Obama Administration Authorizes $1.83 Billion Arms Sale To Taiwan

yolo2016

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WASHINGTON, Dec 16 (Reuters) - The Obama administration formally notified Congress on Wednesday of a $1.83 billion arms sale package for Taiwan, including two frigates, anti-tank missiles, amphibious assault vehicles and other equipment, drawing an angry response from China.

The authorization, which Reuters on Monday reported was imminent, came a year after Congress passed legislation approving the sale. It is the first such major arms sale to Taiwan in more than four years.

The White House said there was no change in the longstanding U.S. "one China" policy. Past U.S. weapons sales to Taiwan have attracted strong condemnation in China, which considers Taiwan a renegade province.

The White House said the authorization followed previous sales notifications by the administration totaling over $12 billion under the Taiwan Relations Act.

"Our longstanding policy on arms sales to Taiwan has been consistent across six different U.S. administrations," a National Security Council spokesman, Myles Caggins, said. "We remain committed to our one-China policy," he added.

Although Washington does not recognize Taiwan as a separate state from China, it is committed under the Taiwan Relations Act to ensuring Taipei can maintain a credible defense.

The sales come at a period of heightened tensions between the United States and China over the South China Sea, where Washington has been critical of China's building of man-made islands to assert expansive territorial claims.

China summoned the U.S. charge d'affaires in Beijing, Kaye Lee, to protest and said it would impose sanctions on the companies involved, China's state news agency Xinhua reported. :rofl:

"Taiwan is an inalienable part of China's territory. China strongly opposes the U.S. arms sale to Taiwan," Xinhua quoted Vice Foreign Minister Zheng Zeguang, who summoned Lee, as saying.

Zheng said the sales went against international law and basic norms of international relations and "severely" harmed China's sovereignty and security.

"To safeguard our national interests, China has decided to take necessary measures, including imposing sanctions against the companies involved in the arms sale," Zheng said.

The U.S. State Department said Raytheon and Lockheed Martin were the main contractors in the sales.

It was not clear what impact sanctions might have on the companies, although in 2013, Lockheed Martin signed an agreement with the Thailand-based Reignwood Group to build an offshore plant to provide energy for a luxury resort on Hainan island in southern China.

Taiwan's defense ministry said in a statement the new weapons would be phased in over a number of years and would enable Taiwan to maintain and develop a credible defense.

U.S. State Department spokesman John Kirby said the decision was based solely on Taiwan's defense needs.

"The Chinese can react to this as they see fit," he said. "This is nothing new. ... There's no need for it to have any derogatory effect on our relationship with China."

Kirby said Washington wanted to work to establish a "better, more transparent more effective relationship" with China in the region and had been in contact with both Taiwan and China on this on Wednesday. He declined to elaborate.

David McKeeby, another State Department spokesman, said the arms package included two Perry-class guided-missile frigates; $57 million of Javelin anti-tank missiles made by Raytheon and Lockheed Martin; $268 million of TOW 2B anti-tank missiles and $217 million of Stinger surface-to-air missiles made by Raytheon, and $375 million of AAV-7 Amphibious Assault Vehicles.

The State Department said the frigates were being offered as surplus items at a cost of $190 million. The package also includes $416 million of guns, upgrade kits, ammunition and support for Raytheon's Close-in Weapons System.

Analysts and congressional sources believe the delay in the formal approval of the sales was due to the Obama administration's desire to maintain stable working relations with China, an increasingly powerful strategic rival but also a vital economic partner as the world's second-largest economy.

U.S. Republican lawmakers said on Wednesday they were pleased the administration had authorized the sale but called for a more regular process for such transactions.

John McCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said this would "avoid extended periods in which fear of upsetting the U.S.-China relationship may harm Taiwan's defense capabilities."
Obama Administration Authorizes $1.83 Billion Arms Sale To Taiwan
 
These kinds of deals are good for Pakistan as upset China will supply more restricted technology to Pakistan to get back to US (and India).
USA is giving India access to many restricted technologies and China and Russia provide the same technologies to Pakistan. But it is GOP's call to make and abreast both friendly nations.
 
In the end, it is all going to China with Taiwan :rofl:

USA is giving India access to many restricted technologies and China and Russia provide the same technologies to Pakistan. But it is GOP's call to make and abreast both friendly nations.


These kinds of deals are good for Pakistan as upset China will supply more restricted technology to Pakistan to get back to US (and India).

Man you guys are hilarious. Then perhaps U.S will get mad and give Pakistan all of Taiwan's weaponry for free, and we will all walk hand in hand with you in an embrace to kill off the hindu!
 
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China outraged at US warship sales to Taiwan

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China has summoned a US diplomat based in Beijing, in order to protest against Washington’s sale of warships to Taiwan as part of a $1.8bn (£1.2bn) arms package.

Taipei will get an array of missiles, amphibious assault vehicles and two frigates in the latest deal, which comes as the US looks to shore up its Asian friends and allies, in the face of growing Chinese assertiveness.

“China staunchly opposes America’s sale of arms to Taiwan,” a statement from the country’s foreign affairs ministry said, as the US charge d’affaires, Kaye Lee, was called in for a dressing down.

It said Beijing would impose sanctions on any companies involved in the sale, and urged Washington to cancel the deal to “avoid causing further damage to Sino-US relations”.

Although it has been governed separately since the end of a civil war in 1949,China considers Taiwan a renegade province awaiting reunification. It regularly lashes out at Washington and other powers for their dealings with Taipei, which it labels as interference in Chinese domestic affairs.

The US weapons sale – the first to Taiwan in four years – comes at an increasingly febrile time in east Asia, where China’s aggressive position on territorial disputeswith its neighbours has raised anxiety levels in the US and among allies from Japan to the Philippines.

Beijing is building islands with military-grade airstrips in the South China Sea, part of what observers say is an attempt to assert control over almost the whole of the body of water. Several countries – along with Taiwan – also claim parts of the sea.

The US and its allies have carried out high-profile flyovers of the sea, nearing the artificial islands, in what they say are routine “freedom of navigation” exercises in international waters. Beijing says they are provocations and infringements of Chinese sovereignty.

In their meeting on Wednesday, the vice-foreign minister, Zheng Zeguang, told Lee the weapons deal “severely goes against international law and the basic norms of international relations”, adding that it “severely harms China’s sovereignty and security interests”.

“US companies’ involvement in arms sales with Taiwan constitutes a severe infringement of China’s sovereignty and security interests”, foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said during a regular press briefing, adding that “the Chinese government and companies will not conduct cooperation of business with those kinds of companies”.

Washington, which is bound by domestic laws to supply defence materials to Taiwan, played down the impact of the agreement. A State Department spokesman, John Kirby, said the deal was in keeping with long-held American policy and would not affect relations with Beijing.
 
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