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US Calls Taiwanese Missiles Destabilizing, Offers Its Own Instead

File image of a missile battery in Taiwan.
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (RIA Novosti) May 08, 2007
The U.S. is trying to discourage Taiwan from acquiring missile technology capable of threatening mainland China, the Taiwanese media said Friday. Stephen Young, director of the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT), the de facto U.S. representative office on the breakaway island, said the U.S. has urged Taiwan to acquire defensive, not offensive, weapons, fearing that this would encourage mainland China to invade Taiwan.

Young's claim that a medium-range Taiwanese missile would be a "destabilizing factor" comes after the Republic of China's Defense Minister Lee Jye claimed Taiwan was developing its own missiles with a range beyond the width of the Taiwan Straight (maximum 180 km) that separates it from mainland China.

Young also expressed U.S. frustration at the fact that the Taiwanese parliament has been obstructing an $18 billion purchase of U.S. weapons for the sixth year in a row, the opposition complaining that the some of the proposed weapons were inappropriate and over priced.

Since 1949, the Taiwan-based democratic Republic of China has claimed independence from the communist mainland, supported by security guarantees from, though not formal diplomatic relations with, the U.S. The People's Republic of China officially considers Taiwan its province and has warned that it would use force if Taiwan were to formally proclaim independence.

Of the little that is known about Taiwan's missile capabilities, it is certain that currently Taiwan operates only anti-ship missiles. It is believed it also has its own unsophisticated 120-km surface-to-surface missiles. The development of longer-range missiles in the 1990s was dropped for technical reasons.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Taiwan Independence Trigger For Conflict
Washington (AFP) May 03, 2007
Japanese Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma said here Wednesday that he did not expect a major conflict to occur over Taiwan unless the island declared independence from China. Kyuma cited the improving economies ties between China and Taiwan as well as between the United States and China, and Japan and China and said he did not expect cross strait tensions to escalate.







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