DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Taiwan’s president: I will boost defense spending to protect our democracy

November 25, 2025
in News
Taiwan’s president: I will boost defense spending to protect our democracy

Lai Ching-te is the president of Taiwan.

For more than four decades, the enduring foundations laid by the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act and reinforced by President Ronald Reagan’s Six Assurances have guided Taiwan and the United States in jointly upholding peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. Together, we have recognized that safeguarding freedom and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific requires clarity and strength.

Today, these principles remain as vital as ever. The People’s Republic of China’s unprecedented military buildup, combined with intensifying provocations in the Taiwan Strait, East and South China Seas and across the Indo-Pacific, have highlighted the fragility of peace in the region. Beijing’s willingness to alter the status quo by force has become increasingly evident.

We are grateful that President Donald Trump has made clear the importance of American leadership around the world. The international community is safer today because of the Trump administration’s pursuit of peace through strength. A strong and engaged America remains a cornerstone for global stability, keeping potential conflict at bay.

Taiwan is equally committed to keeping the Indo-Pacific region safe. Despite record People’s Liberation Army incursions into Taiwan’s vicinity — and military drills probing past what is known as the First Island Chain, extending from Japan to the Philippine archipelago — Taiwan has remained steadfast, acting with firm resolve against the threats and challenges faced.

To further make good on our commitments, I am significantly increasing Taiwan’s defense budget. In response to growing pressure from Beijing, our defense spending, which has already doubled in recent years, is expected to rise to 3.3 percent of gross domestic product by next year. I am committed to lifting this baseline to 5 percent by 2030, representing the largest sustained military investment in Taiwan’s modern history.

As part of this effort, my government will introduce a historic $40 billion supplementary defense budget, an investment that underscores our commitment to defending Taiwan’s democracy. This landmark package will not only fund significant new arms acquisitions from the United States, but also vastly enhance Taiwan’s asymmetrical capabilities. In doing so, we aim to bolster deterrence by inserting greater costs and uncertainties into Beijing’s decision-making on the use of force.

My message here is clear: Taiwan’s dedication to peace and stability is unwavering. No country will be more determined in safeguarding Taiwan’s future than our own.

Looking forward, we will also invest in cutting-edge technologies and expand Taiwan’s defense industrial base. Partnering with like-minded countries, we will leverage Taiwan’s manufacturing strengths to reinforce defense supply chains, accelerate the deployment of advanced systems and rapidly respond to emerging threats — all while creating new jobs at home and abroad.

I am also accelerating the development of “T-Dome,” a multilayered, integrated defense system designed to protect Taiwan from PRC missiles, rockets, drones and combat aircraft. Together with other AI-driven and unmanned platforms, these capabilities bring us closer to the vision of an unassailable Taiwan, safeguarded by innovation and technology.

Furthermore, we will broaden coordination both domestically and with international partners. Last year, we established a top-level Whole-of-Society Defense Resilience Committee, improving collaboration between government, military and civic groups so that our society can better respond to disasters, both man-made and natural. These preparations will continue to intensify.

We will continue to pursue closer security ties with trusted partners and allies. We are grateful that the international community has continued to speak out forcefully for peace across the Taiwan Strait. Recent statements from Japan, the U.S., Europe, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand and the Group of Seven have all contributed to deterrence in the region. We will further cooperate across maritime, cybersecurity, resilience and other domains that support a shared deterrence architecture across the Indo-Pacific.

Cross-strait stability is best served when we heighten the costs of military escalation, while minimizing the threshold of de-escalation. The risks of conflict must always outweigh the price for peace. This is underscored by the pace of our defense reforms and my firm determination to uphold the cross-strait status quo.

While we will continue to pursue opportunities for cross-strait dialogue, with the understanding that our democracy and freedom remain nonnegotiable, we remain grounded by more than wishful thinking, as some have suggested. We will ensure that Taiwan’s security and sovereignty are defended not just by rhetoric but through robust, decisive action.

Both presidents Trump and Reagan have understood the significance of peace through strength. Standing on the front lines of democracy, this is a lesson we live by each and every day. While there is much at stake, Taiwan’s resolve has never been stronger. Working together with America and like-minded democracies, we are confident that peace will prevail.

The post Taiwan’s president: I will boost defense spending to protect our democracy appeared first on Washington Post.

GOP lawmaker quietly questioned ‘disturbing’ East Wing demolition
News

GOP lawmaker quietly questioned ‘disturbing’ East Wing demolition

by Washington Post
February 24, 2026

As GOP leaders leaped to defend President Donald Trump’s decision to tear down the East Wing of the White House ...

Read more
News

Two Missouri Deputies Slain After Stop of Man Newly Released From Jail

February 24, 2026
News

Viral Facebook post said a dog was about to be put down at a San José shelter. It was an AI hoax

February 24, 2026
News

U.S. men’s hockey team to be at State of the Union ‘somehow, some way’

February 24, 2026
News

Fountains of Wayne’s Chris Collingwood Saw Novelty Band Status Unfold in ‘Slow Motion’ Thanks to ‘Stacy’s Mom’

February 24, 2026
D.C. attorney general says Congress missed deadline, failed to block tax policy

D.C. attorney general says Congress missed deadline, failed to block tax policy

February 24, 2026
Bizarre directive from Kash Patel delayed mass shooting response: report

Bizarre directive from Kash Patel delayed mass shooting response: report

February 24, 2026
Without Snow and Ice, Humanity Would Be Cooked

Without Snow and Ice, Humanity Would Be Cooked

February 24, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026