logo
In Trump era, Taiwan defense chief says U.S. still is a check on China

In Trump era, Taiwan defense chief says U.S. still is a check on China

Japan Times26-05-2025

Taiwan is confident that the United States will remain a formidable power in Asia and can deter China from attempting an invasion of the island, Taiwan's defense minister said, while recognizing the urgency of strengthening the island's own defenses.
Some of President Donald Trump's words and actions on Taiwan — raising tariffs, demanding that it drastically raise military spending, and accusing Taiwan of stealing the U.S. lead in making semiconductors — have magnified doubts in Taiwan about whether the United States would step in if China attacked the island. Beijing claims the island democracy is its territory and has said unification is inevitable, by force if necessary.
But China can be held in check by the United States' forces and alliances across Asia, and by reminding Beijing of the terrible economic cost that a war would exact, Wellington Koo, Taiwan's defense minister, said in his most extensive interview since taking the job a year ago.
"If China can be made to understand that the potential costs would be extremely, extremely high, then that will make it extremely hard for it to make a decision' for war, Koo said in the 80-minute interview Wednesday with news outlets including The New York Times.
Taiwan Defense M inister Wellington Koo in Taipei on May 21 |
Lam Yik Fei / The New York Times
"That's what the United States also thinks — that preserving the security of the Indo-Pacific, especially the stability of the Taiwan Strait, by using deterrence to avoid war, is in our shared interest,' Koo said, referring the region where Taiwan is. He later added: "Of course, the Trump administration emphasizes 'America first.' But we believe that on security issues, it also emphasizes Indo-Pacific first.'
Taiwan would be deeply vulnerable without U.S. arms sales and security backing. When Washington switched diplomatic relations from Taiwan to Beijing in 1979, U.S. lawmakers pushed through legislation that says the United States should provide defensive arms to Taiwan and should have the forces to intervene if Taiwan is attacked. The law does not say the United States must intervene.
Koo, 66, a former national security adviser whose Chinese name is Koo Li-hsiung, is overseeing the Taiwanese government's efforts to upgrade its relatively small military into a force strong and nimble enough to fend off threats from China, partly by deploying more drones, unmanned sea vessels and highly mobile missiles.
Many officials and experts in Taiwan and abroad say that the island needs to move faster to counter Beijing's relentless military expansion.
An anti-landing drill during an annual military exercise in the Bali District of Taiwan on July 27, 2023. Wellington Koo says the Trump administration has a shared interest in security in the region, but Taiwan must also ready its own forces for asymmetric warfare. |
Lam Yik Fei / The New York Times
China's leader, Xi Jinping, has ordered the People's Liberation Army to be strong enough to take Taiwan by 2027, senior U.S. officials have said. Observers say Xi does not have a timetable for invasion and would prefer to absorb Taiwan without a war. Asked how he assessed the threat, Koo said the dangers were rising but had not reached the level that meant invasion could be imminent.
"We believe that it falls between medium intensity and high intensity at this point,' Koo said, citing the Taiwanese military's threat-level index, "but the indicators aren't sufficient yet to conclude that there is an intent to attack Taiwan.'
Partly prodded by demands from Trump, Taiwan has promised to increase military spending to more than 3% of gross domestic product, after initially setting it at 2.45% of economic worth earlier this year. Some experts say Taiwan's military is becoming more effective.
"The trajectory is in the right direction. It's now a question of being able to move fast enough,' Ely Ratner, a former U.S. assistant secretary of defense for Indo-Pacific security affairs under President Joe Biden, said of Taiwan's military changes during a recent visit to the island.
Taiwan Defense Minister Wellington Koo in Taipei on May 21. Koo says the Trump administration has a shared interest in security in the region, but Taiwan must also ready its own forces for asymmetric warfare. |
Lam Yik Fei / The New York Times
Taiwanese legislators are set to debate the bigger increase in military spending in the next session of the legislature, which is dominated by lawmakers from the opposition. They generally are less confrontational toward China, and skeptical of some of the government's military projects, such as a Taiwanese-built submarine.
Even with the extra funds, Taiwan faces bottlenecks in buying the right weapons and keeping enough troops with the skills to operate them. Taiwan has paid billions of dollars for U.S. weapons that have not been delivered, sometimes for years, because of a backlog. This month, Taiwan staged its first live-fire test of the high mobility artillery rocket system, or HIMARS, bought from the United States. Taiwan placed its first orders for them in 2020.
"Part of the challenge now is the United States' defense industrial base, whether it can cope with the multiple demands being made on it,' Ratner said in an interview. "Whereas a few years ago the United States was pushing hard for Taiwan to do more, now they are fully committed, and the United States needs to be able to match that in support.'
Last year, Koo put an end to bayonet training and goose-step marching for Taiwanese soldiers and promised that Taiwan's annual military exercises would be made more realistic.
"The national military is at a crucial time of both challenges and transformation, responding to the trends in Taiwan's security and changes in the way of modern warfare,' Koo said, referring to Taiwan's forces. "Practical training is the foundation for forming combat capabilities.'
Military exercises in the Bali District of Taiwan on July 27, 2023 |
Lam Yik Fei / The New York Times
Koo has critics who say that Taiwan's efforts to upgrade military preparations are too superficial and lag China's. Many U.S. officials and experts have urged Taiwan to shift more decisively to newer weapons, such as drones, which are less expensive and more mobile, possibly offering a way to stymie China's bigger forces.
"You have to enhance your skills, professionalism and your mindset. Also, equally important, those drones, unmanned boats and so on, they require effective, efficient, precision communication,' said Andrew Nien-dzu Yang, who served as a senior defense ministry official over a decade ago when the opposition Nationalist Party was in power. "They have this kind of concept, but the problem is how to implement it. How can it be realized?'
Koo, who started his career as a lawyer, made the case that Taiwan was on the way to mastering "asymmetric' warfare strengths that could ward off China. His ministry has established an innovation agency focused on drones and anti-drone warfare, artificial intelligence applications and improved communications and cybersecurity, he said.
President Lai Ching-te has said that a big proportion of Taiwan's increased military spending would go to buying American weapons — a promise that may please Trump, who wants Taiwan to ease its trade surplus with the United States.
"Of course, we also hope that the United States can speed up delivery,' Koo said.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times © 2025 The New York Times Company

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NHK: Tokyo wards differ on status of international school graduates
NHK: Tokyo wards differ on status of international school graduates

NHK

time7 hours ago

  • NHK

NHK: Tokyo wards differ on status of international school graduates

NHK has found that Tokyo's 23 wards have different positions on the status of people who graduate from international schools in Japan. About half of the local governments do not consider such graduates as having completed the country's compulsory education system in line with official curriculum guidelines. International schools in Japan are allowed to create their own curricula, with classes given in English or other non-Japanese languages. The number of Japanese children attending these schools has been growing in Tokyo and other urban areas. NHK found that the figure has reached at least 4,800 in the capital's 23 wards. NHK established that 11 of the wards do not consider international school graduates as having completed the compulsory education at elementary or junior high schools. The wards include Minato, Meguro, Shibuya and Setagaya. More children in the 11 wards go to international schools than children in the other wards do. But ward officials say they cannot grant them graduation status unless the students also attend Japanese elementary or junior high schools. For their part, the 12 other wards grant graduation status in some cases if, among other conditions, graduates also attend schools set up by the wards and undergo interviews with principals. The wards include Toshima, Suginami and Bunkyo. The central government currently does not recognize many international schools as academic institutions where children can receive an education based on the country's compulsory education system. The education ministry says boards of education and individual schools should decide whether to grant students graduation status as they are familiar with each child's circumstances. Tohoku University Professor Aoki Eiichi, an expert on education administration, says he was surprised to learn that the wards have different positions. He also says people in Tokyo have greater mistrust in public education than their counterparts in other parts of the country. Aoki says the central government should get a clear picture of the issue surrounding the status of international school graduates and draw up guidelines to help local governments decide on how to approach the issue.

China's college entrance exam for 13 million students begins
China's college entrance exam for 13 million students begins

NHK

time9 hours ago

  • NHK

China's college entrance exam for 13 million students begins

China's national college entrance exam kicked off on Saturday with more than 13 million students taking part. In the capital Beijing, traffic was restricted around exam venues where parents and volunteers were seen sending off exam candidates. A male student said he studied until late every day. He added that the exam would be all right as long as he did not get nervous, although he was a little. One mother said she was hoping for a good outcome as she wants her child to become a civil servant or a lawyer. The ratio of Chinese high school students advancing to higher education reached more than 60 percent in 2023, twice that of a decade ago. In recent years, competition for entry to colleges and universities advantageous to finding employment has intensified as the economy has slowed. China's education ministry says around 13.35 million applicants registered for this year's exam. That is 70,000 fewer than last year's record high. Chinese media attributed the decrease to the shrinking young population and an increasing number of students pursuing higher education abroad. The United States has been the most popular destination. But the number of Chinese studying there has declined amid tensions between Beijing and Washington after the coronavirus pandemic already slashed the total. The Institute of International Education says about 277,000 Chinese nationals studied in the US in the 2023-2024 academic year, down nearly 100,000 compared with the 2019-2020 academic year. The Trump administration announced last month that it would revoke visas for Chinese students, including those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party. President Donald Trump said after a phone call with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday that those who pass US screening are still welcome. In contrast, increasing numbers of Chinese students are coming to Japan. The Japan Student Services Organization says there were over 123,000 in the 2024-2025 academic year, about 8,000 more than a year earlier. Chinese students account for the largest proportion of foreigners studying in Japan. Factors behind the increase are believed to be Japan's geographic proximity to China and the relatively low academic fees.

Japanese and South Korean leaders could hold first meeting during G7 summit
Japanese and South Korean leaders could hold first meeting during G7 summit

Japan Times

time14 hours ago

  • Japan Times

Japanese and South Korean leaders could hold first meeting during G7 summit

Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and new South Korean President Lee Jae-myung could hold their first meeting at a Group of Seven (G7) summit later this month in Canada, after Lee announced Saturday that he would be attending the event. Lee took office Wednesday after winning South Korea's presidential election following the ouster of his predecessor, Yoon Suk Yeol, over his short-lived martial law declaration in December. The South Korean Presidential Office said in a statement that Lee had been invited by G7 leaders to attend the meeting — making it his first foray onto the international diplomatic stage. The summit involves the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States and is scheduled to take place for three days from June 15. Indian leader Narendra Modi has also been invited by host Canada. Lee, who had in the past been known for a seemingly hard-line stance toward Japan — including his fierce opposition to the Yoon administration's third-party compensation plan for Korean wartime laborers at Japanese factories and mines before and during World War II — repeatedly denied he was anti-Japan, calling this a 'preconception.' In an inaugural address Wednesday, the new South Korean leader said his government would continue Yoon's policy of strengthening cooperation with Japan amid concerns in Tokyo that he might reverse agreements reached under his ousted predecessor that led to a thaw in ties. Ishiba was quick to congratulate Lee on his victory, emphasizing just ahead of Lee's speech that he hoped to use this year, the 60th anniversary of diplomatic relations, as a chance to "further intensify cooperation between Japan and South Korea' — despite the new president's reputation. South Korean President Lee Jae-myung during his inauguration ceremony at the National Assembly in Seoul on Wednesday. | BLOOMBERG "The new president has made statements in the past, but during the election campaign he said that Japan is an important partner and that he loves the Japanese people," Ishiba said. "It would be good if we could hold a Japan-South Korea summit as soon as possible," he added. Lee could also hold his first meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump, while Ishiba may also hold talks with his American counterpart on the sidelines of the summit, where the U.S. and Japan could announce an agreement on a trade deal over sweeping tariffs slapped on Tokyo by Washington. Trump and Lee held their first phone call Friday, with the two agreeing to work toward a swift tariff deal, while Japan's top negotiator met with his U.S. counterparts in Washington this week. Trump has slapped Japan and South Korea — two of the United States' top allies in Asia — with onerous tariffs, measures that both Tokyo and Seoul are eager to see removed. It is not clear if Ishiba, Lee and Trump would also hold talks, though all three leaders have said they hope to continue trilateral cooperation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store