Taiwan’s parliament authorised the government on Friday to sign U.S. agreements for four arms sales ‌packages worth some $9 billion, after officials warned that Taipei would go to the back of the queue if it missed the deadline, sending the wrong message to Washington.

– The back and forth on Taiwan’s defence spending has provoked concern in the United States, as it is the most important international backer ​and arms supplier of the Chinese-claimed island, despite a lack of formal diplomatic ties.

– “This body upholds the principle ​of placing national security first and firmly defending territorial integrity,” parliament speaker Han Kuo-yu said, reading ⁠the resolution, which passed unanimously.

– He urged the government to submit a complete report on the weapons delivery schedule for parliament ​to review after it signs the letters.

– The weapons covered include TOW anti-tank missiles, M109A7 self-propelled howitzers, Lockheed Martin-made Javelin missiles and ​the HIMARS multiple launch rocket system, worth around $9 billion in total and part of an $11 billion package Washington announced in December.

– President Lai Ching-te’s government has tried to get parliament to pass $40 billion in extra defence spending but the opposition, which controls the most seats, says the proposals are unclear, ​and it cannot be expected to pass “blank cheques”.

– Both opposition parties drew up their own, cheaper alternatives, but the defence ministry ​said the letters of offer and acceptance for the weapons have to be signed with the United States by Sunday, or Taiwan risked ‌losing its ⁠place in the production and delivery queue.

– Parliament’s formal authorisation on Friday came a day after lawmakers from both sides agreed that the government could sign the deals in advance, even if spending reviews were not approved in time.

– Taiwan’s defence ministry expressed its thanks for the authorisation, rejecting opposition claims the plans were opaque.

– They were prepared through a “rigorous project approval process”, it added, to ​meet the military’s requirements.

– Ruling party ​lawmakers welcomed the approval.

– “The advance ⁠authorisation to sign before the budget is reviewed is intended to ensure that Taiwan’s acquisition of these important systems is not delayed or cancelled,” said Wang Ting-yu, a Democratic Progressive Party ​lawmaker who sits on parliament’s defence committee.

– On Tuesday, Defence Minister Wellington Koo told reporters the ​letters of offer ⁠and acceptance for 82 HIMARS systems the U.S. announced as part of the $11-billion arms sale package for Taiwan would expire on March 26.

– A second arms package, worth around $14 billion, could be approved for Taiwan after U.S. President Donald Trump visits Beijing later this month, sources told ⁠Reuters.

– The Trump ​administration has pressed allies to boost defence spending, a plank Lai’s government ​has embraced as China steps up drills and exercises around the island to press its sovereignty claims.

– Taiwan rejects Beijing’s claims, saying only its people have the ​right to decide the island’s future.

https://www.reuters.com/world/china/taiwan-parliament-authorises-government-sign-stalled-us-arms-deals-2026-03-13

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