US President Barack
Obama’s approval to sell guided-missile frigates to Taiwan
will not alter China 's
major military advantage over the island it has long called a
"renegade" province. But a sale represents the first significant
self-defense purchase by Taiwan
in three years, and brought an expected rebuke by China .
The White House’s
sign-off Thursday on the Naval Vessel Transfer Act of 2013 act,
authorizing sales of four ships, prompted a formal protest from Beijing . China ’s foreign ministry also told the US government to abolish the arms sales in order
to help mainland China get
on better with both Washington and Taipei .
Yet China ’s anger with the US is likely to fade, analysts say, given the
fresh momentum in relations after Mr. Obama’s meetings in Beijing last month with Chinese leader Xi
Jinping to discuss tourism, climate control and tariffs on electronic goods.
“Beijing
will squawk, and Obama will rightly tune them out,” says Sean King, senior vice
president with the consultancy Park Strategies in New York
and Taipei . “I
don't think he cares what Beijing thinks” about
the sales of the naval vessels, two of which Taiwan is likely to purchase.
“These are not
state-of-the-art vessels. They don’t significantly enhance Taiwan ’s
military capabilities,” said Raymond Wu, managing director of Taipei-based
political risk consultancy e-telligence. “It’s not something that will catch a
lot of local attention.”
The US has kept peace by not approving new arms
deals with Taiwan
since the 2011 agreement to upgrade 146 US-made F-16 fighter jets.
When the United States approved a $6.4 billion arms
package for Taiwan in 2010,
including Patriot air-defense missiles and Black Hawk helicopters, China cancelled specific military exchanges with
Washington
and said it would sanction American defense contractors involved in the deal.
In 2008, China cut military contacts with the US for nearly 10 months after an agreement to
sell arms to Taiwan .
Obama’s
signature Thursday also does not guarantee a sale, which Taipei and Washington
must arrange separately. It will be subject to possibly tough parliamentary
approval in Taiwan
and, if worth more than $50 million as expected, a nod from US Congress.
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