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TAIWAN NEWS
US pledges to consider Taiwan jet sales
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) April 27, 2012


The White House promised "serious consideration" Friday to selling new US fighter jets to Taiwan, winning the support from a senator who had blocked a Pentagon appointment as a protest.

Senator John Cornyn, a Republican from Texas, released a letter from the White House that said President Barack Obama's administration was "committed to assisting Taiwan" in closing a gap in airpower with China.

Cornyn's proposal to sell new F-16C/D jets "warrants serious consideration given the growing military threat to Taiwan," said the letter signed by Robert Nabors, an Obama aide tasked with relations with Congress.

Under US law, the administration is required to provide for the self-defense of Taiwan, a self-governing democracy that China claims as its territory. The Obama administration authorized a $5.85 billion upgrade of Taiwan's aging fighter jets in September.

The deal drew immediate criticism from Obama's Republican rivals, who argued that the sale of brand-new jets, while likely upsetting Beijing, would better defend Taiwan from a rising China as well as create US manufacturing jobs.

The Obama administration argued at the time that an upgrade rather than sale of new planes would more immediately address Taiwan's military needs.

But the letter to Cornyn said: "We are mindful of and share your concerns about Taiwan's growing shortfall in fighter aircraft as (its existing) F-5s are retired from service and notwithstanding the upgrade of the F-16A/Bs."

Cornyn had pressured the administration by placing a hold -- a legislative move under which a senator can block a nomination -- on Mark Lippert, whom Obama named to be the assistant secretary of defense in charge of Asia.

Cornyn announced that he was lifting his hold on Lippert but would still press the administration until it sells new warplanes to Taiwan.

"I commend the administration for recognizing that our friend and ally Taiwan's air force is woefully undersized and outgunned by communist China," he said in a statement.

China regularly protests any US arms packages for Taiwan. But its reaction to the September deal was comparatively muted, with US officials seeing little concrete retaliation such as the cancellation of visits.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner are heading to Beijing next week for key annual talks between the United States and China.

Related Links
Taiwan News at SinoDaily.com




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Taiwan welcomes US reconsideration on jet sale
Taipei (AFP) April 29, 2012 - Taiwan on Sunday said it welcomed the pledge by the United States to reconsider a proposed sale of new fighter jets to the island, a defence deal likely to upset Beijing.

Taiwan has been pushing for the purchase of 66 new US-made F-16 fighter jets, but the deal has been stalled by Washington.

The White House on Friday promised "serious consideration" to selling the jets in the wake of "the growing military threat to Taiwan".

"Taiwan welcome any projects that will help enhance and strengthen our self-defence capabilities," Taiwan's defence ministry spokesman David Lo said, declining to elaborate on the sensitive issue.

Under US law, the administration is required to provide for the self-defence of Taiwan, a self-governing democracy that China claims as its territory.

Washington announced in September it would equip Taiwan's 146 F-16 A/B jets with new technologies, in a $5.85 billion deal which falls short of the island's fervent wish for 66 new F-16 C/Ds.

Although the package was less than what Taiwan had hoped for, it triggered an angry response from China, which warned that the deal would damage Sino-US military ties.

Tensions between Taipei and Beijing have eased markedly since 2008 when Ma Ying-jeou of the China-friendly Kuomintang party came to power on platform of beefing up trade and tourism links with China.

Yet China still considers it part of its territory and has threatened to invade Taiwan even though the island has ruled itself for more than 60 years at the end of a civil war in 1949.



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Taiwan court upholds life term for spying general
Taipei (AFP) April 27, 2012
Taiwan's top court has rejected an appeal by an ex-general sentenced to life in prison for spying for China, the toughest punishment meted out in an espionage case in decades, officials said Friday. The supreme court made the final decision Thursday on the case of former major general Lo Hsien-che, who is also the highest-ranking official ever to be convicted of spying in Taiwan, defence off ... read more


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