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Taiwan Tweaks Its Patriots

January 31, 2009: Despite vague Chinese promises that it might remove some of the thousand ballistic missiles aimed at it, Taiwan has signed a $154 million contract with a U.S. firm to upgrade the island nations Patriot missile systems. These hardware and software changes will make the Taiwanese Patriot batteries equal in performance to those used by the U.S. Army. That is, the Taiwanese Patriot systems will be able to fire the PAC-3 anti-missile missile, and station the Patriot launchers many kilometers from the system radars. Taiwan has also ordered hundreds of PAC-3 missiles.

Taiwan, increasingly anxious about China's military buildup, boosted its defense spending by about 15 percent last year (to $10.5 billion). China spends over five times as much on defense, to support about two million troops. Taiwan has only 350,000 troops, and a population of 23 million, compared to 1.3 billion on the mainland. Taiwans's GPD is $650 billion, compared to $2.7 trillion for China. Thus the per capital income of Taiwan is more than ten times that of the mainland. Taiwans military is based on the American model, with an emphasis on quality. China based its military on the Soviet model (where quantity has a quality all its own), although for decades the emphasis was on mobilizing a huge force of guerillas. Now China is trying to develop a force that can fight on Western terms (high tech operated by well trained troops.)

While many Taiwanese still see the United States as the ultimate guarantor of Taiwanese independence, they see China as increasingly capable of grabbing the island before the U.S. can intervene. So while the Taiwanese don't have to be strong enough to defeat a Chinese invasion, they do have to be strong enough to hold the Chinese back until American reinforcements can show up.

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Gerry       1/31/2009 9:21:27 PM
The Taiwanese need to rethink in terms of an agreement with China for eventual takeover. As was done in Hong Kong. Independence with a special say in what happens in the future. The US should never have been Taiwans advocate to begin with. Only the pro Chaing Ki Sheck popular ( re-takeCommunist China movement in the US during the 1950s) has kept this alive. It is long past time to agree that Taiwan belongs to the Chinese mainland, and the dream of Chaing ever returning is long gone. The US does not need to go to war over a 1950s misplaced policy.
 
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gf0012-aust       1/31/2009 9:54:40 PM
ROFLMAO - Hong Kong has independance?

Taiwan is in the first string of pearls - that should be a clue as to how benevolent the mainland will be as it pushes to the 2nd and 3rd string.

The mainland isn't entitled to anything
 
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locutus    Future   2/1/2009 5:14:04 AM

 As was done in Hong Kong. Independence with a special say in what happens in the future.

If I'm independent, then why do I need a special say in my own future?
 
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kaltes       2/4/2009 1:56:54 PM
"Taiwan ... boosted its defense spending by about 15 percent last year (to $10.5 billion). China spends over five times as much on defense"
 
Why is strategypage so utterly clueless about Taiwan/China defense spending? The official 2008 budget for China's military in 2008 was $61 billion, however, China does not include many types of defense spending, and lies about what it does include, so outside estimates of China's defense spending are much higher than the official figure.
 
The Department of Defense estimates China's defense spending to be well in excess of $100 billion at this point. The rule of thumb is that China spends 2 to 3 times as much as its official figure. This means China's actual military spending is 12 to 18 times higher than Taiwan's spending.
 
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