The National Defense Committee of the legislature once again put off its scheduled screening of the proposed budget for the purchase of four Kidd-class destroyers yesterday because opposition lawmakers objected to the proposal.
Lawmakers with the PFP, led by ex-navy chief Admiral Nelson Ku (
KMT lawmakers came up with a proposal that the budget for the Kidds be shelved for a year and approval of the budget should be decided by the defense committee next year.
DPP lawmakers, who were unified in their support for the purchase of the Kidds, were unable to convince the opposition camp to get behind the proposal.
The defense committee agreed to put off its screening of the proposed budget, which was scheduled to be completed yesterday.
It was the second time that the screening of the proposed budget for the Kidds was postponed.
The defense committee should have finished its screening of the proposed budget last week, but it put it off to yesterday after heavy resistance from the opposition camp.
Last week, the KMT legislative caucus came up with the idea that the navy could choose to lease the Kidds from the US or that the US could offer loans to Taiwan for the purchase of the ships.
The idea was not accepted by the navy, which said if it chose to lease the Kidds, it would have to spend more money.
This week, some KMT lawmakers on the defense committee were reluctant to give ground to the navy and suggested that the Kidds deal be shelved until next year.
A navy general, who spoke on condition of anonymity, expressed worry about the development.
"It is apparent that some lawmakers oppose the Kidds deal for no reason. We have told them that their solutions are not workable," he said.
The screening of the proposed budget for the Kidds has been put off till tomorrow as the defense committee meets for an examination of the classified portion of the proposed defense budget for next year.
The defense committee's meeting yesterday also covered next year's classified defense budget.
The committee was scheduled to finish the screening of the classified budget involving the army and navy yesterday.
By the end of the day, only NT$5 million was cut from the proposed budget while the classified defense committee agreed to the army's purchase of a new tactical communication system.
China might accelerate its strategic actions toward Taiwan, the South China Sea and across the first island chain, after the US officially entered a military conflict with Iran, as Beijing would perceive Washington as incapable of fighting a two-front war, a military expert said yesterday. The US’ ongoing conflict with Iran is not merely an act of retaliation or a “delaying tactic,” but a strategic military campaign aimed at dismantling Tehran’s nuclear capabilities and reshaping the regional order in the Middle East, said National Defense University distinguished adjunct lecturer Holmes Liao (廖宏祥), former McDonnell Douglas Aerospace representative in Taiwan. If
TO BE APPEALED: The environment ministry said coal reduction goals had to be reached within two months, which was against the principle of legitimate expectation The Taipei High Administrative Court on Thursday ruled in favor of the Taichung Environmental Protection Bureau in its administrative litigation against the Ministry of Environment for the rescission of a NT$18 million fine (US$609,570) imposed by the bureau on the Taichung Power Plant in 2019 for alleged excess coal power generation. The bureau in November 2019 revised what it said was a “slip of the pen” in the text of the operating permit granted to the plant — which is run by Taiwan Power Co (Taipower) — in October 2017. The permit originally read: “reduce coal use by 40 percent from Jan.
‘SPEY’ REACTION: Beijing said its Eastern Theater Command ‘organized troops to monitor and guard the entire process’ of a Taiwan Strait transit China sent 74 warplanes toward Taiwan between late Thursday and early yesterday, 61 of which crossed the median line in the Taiwan Strait. It was not clear why so many planes were scrambled, said the Ministry of National Defense, which tabulated the flights. The aircraft were sent in two separate tranches, the ministry said. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Thursday “confirmed and welcomed” a transit by the British Royal Navy’s HMS Spey, a River-class offshore patrol vessel, through the Taiwan Strait a day earlier. The ship’s transit “once again [reaffirmed the Strait’s] status as international waters,” the foreign ministry said. “Such transits by
Taiwan is doing everything it can to prevent a military conflict with China, including building up asymmetric defense capabilities and fortifying public resilience, Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴) said in a recent interview. “Everything we are doing is to prevent a conflict from happening, whether it is 2027 or before that or beyond that,” Hsiao told American podcaster Shawn Ryan of the Shawn Ryan Show. She was referring to a timeline cited by several US military and intelligence officials, who said Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) had instructed the Chinese People’s Liberation Army to be ready to take military action against Taiwan