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Taiwan says next US arms purchase is on track after guarantee

Taiwan says next US arms purchase is on track after guarantee

ReutersFri, March 27, 2026 at 1:31 AM UTC

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FILE PHOTO: Taiwan’s Defence Minister Wellington Koo visits the United States pavilion during the Taipei Aerospace and Defence Technology Exhibition in Taipei, Taiwan, September 18, 2025. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo

TAIPEI, March 26 (Reuters) - Taiwan Defence Minister Wellington Koo said on Thursday the next arms sale package from the United States is on track after the government received a letter of guarantee from ‌Washington, even as the U.S. and Chinese leaders prepare to meet in May.

A major U.S. arms package for ‌Taiwan worth about $14 billion that includes advanced interceptor missiles is ready for U.S. President Donald Trump's approval and could be signed after his upcoming ​trip to China, Reuters reported this month, citing sources briefed on the discussion.

But Trump has postponed that trip, originally scheduled for early April, due to the Middle East war, and is now due in Beijing May 14-15.

Taiwan, which China views as its own territory, is sure to be a topic, especially after Chinese President Xi Jinping told Trump in a call last month ‌that the U.S. must "carefully" handle arms sales ⁠to the democratically-governed island.

Asked by reporters at Taiwan's parliament whether the Trump-Xi meeting would impact U.S. arms sales, Koo said the government had already received a letter of guarantee indicating the ⁠U.S. is willing to authorise the next deal.

"We have also been in close communication with the U.S. Department of War's Defense Security Cooperation Agency regarding its willingness to provide and sell this to us, including guidance concerning the items, the amount, and the ​transaction," ​he added, without offering details.

The package is still undergoing an internal ​U.S. review and Taiwan has not received any ‌notification about delays, Koo said.

A U.S. State Department spokesperson declined to comment on pending arms sales but said the Trump administration's "enduring U.S. commitment to Taiwan continues."

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China has repeatedly demanded Washington end arms sales to Taipei, the last of which in December was worth $11 billion, the largest ever for Taiwan.

A Chinese defence ministry spokesperson on Thursday urged Washington to handle Taiwan with "extreme caution".

"The United States should fully recognize the high sensitivity and serious harmfulness of the issue ‌of arms sales to Taiwan," spokesperson Jiang Bin told a regular ​press briefing in Beijing.

Taiwan's opposition-dominated parliament is continuing to debate President Lai ​Ching-te's $40 billion in extra defence spending, though it ​has already authorised the government to sign U.S. agreements for four arms sales packages worth some $9 ‌billion before the budget is passed.

Koo said the ​government was talking to the ​U.S. about possibly deferring payment or reducing the initial payment given he could not predict when parliament may approve the funds.

The U.S. is Taiwan's most important international backer and weapons supplier, despite the lack of formal diplomatic ​ties, and is bound by law ‌to provide the island with the means to defend itself.

Taiwan has faced stepped-up Chinese military pressure in ​recent years, including war games.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Antoni Slodkowski and Beijing newsroom; Editing ​by Michael Perry, Tom Hogue, Greg Torode and Kevin Buckland)

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