US defends $6.4bn weapons sale to Taiwan
BBC News
January 30, 2009
The US has defended a proposed weapons sale to Taiwan following a furious response from China.
The US State Department said on Saturday that the sale contributed to “security and stability” between Taiwan and China, Reuters reported.
Beijing announced a series of moves against the US in retaliation for the proposed $6.4bn (£4bn) sale.
Ties between the two countries are already strained by rows over trade and internet censorship.
ANALYSIS
Damian Grammaticas
Damian Grammaticas, BBC News, Beijing
You would expect China to react angrily to any proposed arms sale to Taiwan, but this time it seems to be going further than before.
Suspending military exchanges is a classic reply from Beijing and it may not even concern the US too much.
China’s threat to impose sanctions on US firms supplying arms to Taiwan is interesting if perplexing.
It’s unclear what “sanctions” would involve in practice, since US firms aren’t allowed to sell arms to China
China’s threat to withdraw co-operation on key international and regional issues is the most serious one. Here China can make life difficult for Washington.
It can complicate US attempts to deal with nuclear programmes in Iran and North Korea, it can refuse to help in currency and trade issues.
But what is China trying to achieve by sounding so furious? Maybe Beijing’s real aim is to try to deter America from future arms sales – for example the fighter jets and submarines which Taiwan really wants.
“Such sales contribute to maintaining security and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” said US State Department spokeswoman Laura Tischler, quoted by Reuters.
The US is the leading arms supplier to Taiwan and has a treaty obligation to provide it with defensive arms. more …









