Taiwan Sees Warships as China Talks Peace with KMT
Why it matters: Taiwan's inability to pass a defense spending hike risks undermining US and international confidence in its self-defense resolve.
- Taiwanese officials are tracking a "very rare" increase in Chinese naval and coast guard vessels, with nearly 100 ships deployed this week, up from a usual 50-60, according to two security officials.
- China is simultaneously pushing a message of peace and cooperation, with President Xi Jinping meeting KMT chairwoman Cheng Li-wun in Beijing, stating a desire for peace but vowing "absolutely not tolerate" Taiwan independence.
- Taiwan Defence Minister Wellington Koo expressed concern over China's expanding military capabilities and the opposition KMT's decision to skip talks on stalled defense spending, warning it could make allies question Taiwan's resolve.
- Two non-Taiwanese security sources corroborated the increased vessel numbers but viewed it as a "new normal" from China rather than an alarming anomaly, offering a differing perspective on the severity.
- The KMT denies any connection between Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun's trip to China and the government's defense spending plans.
Taiwanese officials are alarmed by a significant increase in Chinese naval and coast guard vessels, with nearly 100 ships deployed this week, even as Beijing engages in peace talks with Taiwan's opposition Kuomintang (KMT) party. This military pressure coincides with the KMT's resistance to a defense spending hike, creating a complex dynamic that Taiwan's Defence Minister Wellington Koo warns could undermine international confidence in the island's resolve.
