Foreign Policy magazine says that US President Barack Obama “is getting ready” to announce an arms sales package to Taiwan that will include Black Hawk helicopters and Patriot missile batteries.
“Taiwanese sources now say they expect the decision shortly after Obama  returns from the climate-change conference,” the magazine said.
Obama  will be at the Copenhagen conference on Friday and Washington sources said the  arms package for Taiwan was likely to be announced during the final week of the  year.
But this could not be confirmed, and internal White House politics  could always result in a delay.
Most significantly, the magazine says,  the package will not include advanced F-16 fighters or design plans for diesel  submarines.
White House experts believe that China will react negatively  to the announcement and may even break off the recently reestablished  military-to-military contacts with the US as a way of showing its  displeasure.
In private conversations last month — before Obama’s trip to  China — administration sources told the Taipei Times not to expect the new arms  package before next month or February.
Other sources now say that the  announcement has been moved forward at least in part to answer US domestic  critics who have complained loudly that Obama failed to stand up to Beijing and  that he spent most of his Asia visit kowtowing to the Chinese  leadership.
The arms package for Taiwan, these sources say, is designed  to demonstrate that Obama’s Asian policies are not dominated by a desire to  please the Chinese.
“The Obama administration is getting ready to  announce a package of arms sales to Taiwan that could complicate delicate  relations between Washington and Beijing,” the magazine said this  weekend.
Foreign Policy says it has been told by “Taiwanese government  sources” that the arms package will include most of the items the US and Taiwan  agreed upon previously, but not F-16s or submarines.
National Security  Council Deputy Secretary-General Ho Szu-yin (何思因) was in Washington recently to  discuss details of the package.
Earlier this year, Taipei wanted to  submit a formal letter specifically requesting advanced F-16 fighters, but  sources say the Obama administration strongly discouraged this move so that they  would not have to turn it down.
Abe Denmark, Asia expert at the Center  for a New American Security, is quoted by the magazine as saying: “Given the  broad agenda that Presidents Obama and [Chinese President] Hu Jintao (胡錦濤) laid  out in Beijing last month, I expect China to register their complaints, register  their disapproval and then move on.”
The White House will send an  official notification to Congress detailing what arms it plans to sell Taipei  under the Taiwan Relations Act.
At that point, only Senate Foreign  Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry, a Democrat, and House Speaker Nancy  Pelosi, also a Democrat, have the right to object and ask for changes.  
“But that is seen as very unlikely,” Foreign Policy said.
Black  Hawk helicopters and Patriot missile batteries are expected to be in the  package.
“Over the years, US arms sales to Taiwan have become a political  football, more symbolic than strategic considering the towering and growing  imbalance of power across the Taiwan Strait,” Foreign Policy says.
“China  continues to build up its missile inventory opposite Taiwan, which is now  estimated to top 1,300 missiles capable of hitting Taiwan,” the magazine  says.
“When the sale is announced, pundits on both sides of the Pacific  will be sure to praise or decry the move as Obama either bravely standing by  Taiwan or dangerously thumbing his nose at the Chinese. But following the harsh  criticism of his trip to Beijing, criticism the White House feels was unfair and  unsupported, the White House is looking for a new storyline,” the magazine says.
Source: Taipei Times 2009/12/14








