Taiwan Defence Minister rejects opposition’s cut‑price budget and US arms deadline
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Taiwan Defence Minister Wellington Koo (left) said the government's proposal has the backing of the US administration and Congress.
PHOTO: REUTERS
TAIPEI – Taiwan’s Defence Minister Wellington Koo on March 6 rebuffed the main opposition party, which had proposed a defence budget roughly one-third of the amount sought by the government and set a deadline for US arms purchases that he said was impossible.
Taiwan has faced pressure from the US to sharply raise defence spending. Taiwan President Lai Ching-te in 2025 proposed extra defence spending of US$40 billion (S$51.1 billion) to counter China, which has ramped up military pressure to force the island to accept its claim of sovereignty.
But the main opposition Kuomintang (KMT), which together with a smaller party holds a majority in Parliament, refused to review the proposal and instead this week advanced its own, less expensive proposals, which fund only around 30 per cent of the spending that Mr Lai wants.
The move came after growing pressure from politicians in the US, Taiwan’s most important international backer and arms supplier, to not hold up spending.
In the KMT’s counterproposal, a copy of which was reviewed by Reuters, the party set a cap of T$380 billion (S$15.32 billion) on the spending and a deadline for completion by the end of 2028.
Speaking to reporters in Taipei, Mr Koo said the government’s proposal included precision artillery and anti-armour unmanned systems.
“If everything is required to be delivered and fully implemented before that deadline, it would in effect shut down these projects, making their execution impossible,” he said.
The KMT also said it backs US arms deals handled between the two governments and opposes deals arranged through commercial channels, which it views as vulnerable to irregularities and inadequate scrutiny.
In response, Mr Koo said omitting any channel for acquiring weapons would “create a major gap in our overall defence and operational capabilities and significantly undermine the improvement of our joint combat capabilities”.
He added the government’s proposal has the backing of the US administration and Congress.
The KMT has described Mr Lai’s plan as “sky‑high” and vague, citing the need for clearer oversight.
KMT chairwoman Cheng Li-wun has said her party has been in communication with the Communist Party of China, and that she hopes to visit China in 2026 for a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
China regularly stages military exercises around Taiwan, and refuses to talk to Mr Lai, calling him a “separatist”. Mr Lai says only Taiwan’s people can decide their future. REUTERS


