The US is to advise Taiwan’s armed forces in planning and assessing the upcoming Han Kuang military exercises in a contract negotiated through Taiwan’s defense attache in Washington.
According to a senior Ministry of National Defense official, the five-year contract covers a NT$94.78 million (US$3.1 million) program with the US military taking a larger advisory role and enhancing collaboration with Taiwan’s military.
Under the contract, the US is to send military advisers — from this year until 2019 — to assist in Taiwan’s most important annual military exercises, which are to be conducted later this month and in September, said the senior ministry official, who requested anonymity.
Photo: Fang Pin-chao, Taipei Times
This new development is significant, as Taiwan previously invited important Pentagon representatives, mostly retired generals, as observers to the Han Kuang exercises. The signed deal means the US is to shift from a passive to an active role.
“It will also advance higher levels of cooperation and deepen the scope of military exchanges between the two sides. The US will advise in strategic planning and operational deployment of combat units for Taiwan’s defense against hostile actions in the Taiwan Strait,” the official said.
“In effect, this development means the understanding has been achieved for joint US-Taiwan military collaboration to deter China’s military threat of invasion from across the Taiwan Strait,” he added.
The official said that most details of the contract program are classified, but it was negotiated in the US by Taiwan’s Defense Procurement Division in Washington as a signed contract, with the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) representing the US.
He added that the contract is part of Taiwan’s arms procurement program, which is raised with Washington each year, to upgrade Taiwan’s defense capability against external threats.
The ministry did not give a definitive official response when asked about this development.
Ministry spokesman Major General David Lo (羅紹和) yesterday said that the ministry has always upheld the same stance in not commenting on such issues and cannot discuss the details of the case.
Lo said that the Han Kuang military exercises are planned and carried out by the nation’s armed forces, and — as far as his understanding goes — the defense ministry did not contract out the planning and assessment of these annual exercises to the US.
When asked, AIT spokesperson Mark Zimmer said he was unaware of news reports on the issue, and was unable to comment on it and cannot discuss details, while adding that the US’ commitment to Taiwan is unchanged under the Taiwan Relations Act.
The Republic of China (ROC) is celebrating its 114th Double Ten National Day today, featuring military parades and a variety of performances and speeches in front of the Presidential Office in Taipei. The Taiwan Taiko Association opened the celebrations with a 100-drummer performance, including young percussionists. As per tradition, an air force Mirage 2000 fighter jet flew over the Presidential Office as a part of the performance. The Honor Guards of the ROC and its marching band also heralded in a military parade. Students from Taichung's Shin Min High School then followed with a colorful performance using floral imagery to represent Taiwan's alternate name
The Ministry of the Interior (MOI) is to tighten rules for candidates running for public office, requiring them to declare that they do not hold a Chinese household registration or passport, and that they possess no other foreign citizenship. The requirement was set out in a draft amendment to the Enforcement Rules of the Public Officials Election and Recall Act (公職人員選舉罷免法 ) released by the ministry on Thursday. Under the proposal, candidates would need to make the declaration when submitting their registration forms, which would be published in the official election bulletin. The move follows the removal of several elected officials who were
COGNITIVE WARFARE: Chinese fishing boats transmitting fake identification signals are meant to test Taiwan’s responses to different kinds of perceived incursions, a report said Chinese vessels are transmitting fake signals in Taiwan’s waters as a form of cognitive warfare, testing Taipei’s responses to various types of incursions, a report by the Institute for the Study of War said on Friday. Several Chinese fishing vessels transmitted fake automatic identification system (AIS) signals in Taiwan’s waters last month, with one mimicking a Russian warship and another impersonating a Chinese law enforcement vessel, the report said. Citing data from Starboard Maritime Intelligence, the report said that throughout August and last month, the Chinese fishing boat Minshiyu 06718 (閩獅漁06718) sailed through the Taiwan Strait while intermittently transmitting its own AIS
CHINESE INFILTRATION: Medical logistics is a lifeline during wartime and the reported CCP links of a major logistics company present a national security threat, an expert said The government would bolster its security check system to prevent China from infiltrating the nation’s medical cold chain, a national security official said yesterday. The official, who wished to stay anonymous, made the remarks after the Chinese-language magazine Mirror Media (鏡周刊) reported that Pharma Logistics (嘉里醫藥物流) is in charge of the medical logistics of about half of the nation’s major hospitals, including National Taiwan University Hospital and Taipei Veterans General Hospital. The company’s parent, Kerry TJ Logistics Co (嘉里大榮物流), is associated with the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) and the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA), the