UPDATE 1-Taiwan 'cautiously optimistic' about US arms sales, defence minister says

This was established under the Taiwan Relations Act," he added, referring ​to the 1979 law that mandates arms sales. Weapons sales are an important "counterbalancing force" ⁠for maintaining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait, Koo said.


Reuters | Updated: 19-05-2026 12:38 IST | Created: 19-05-2026 12:38 IST
UPDATE 1-Taiwan 'cautiously optimistic' about US arms sales, defence minister says

Taiwan Defence ​Minister Wellington Koo on Tuesday said ​he was "cautiously optimistic" about arms sales ‌from the ​U.S., after President Donald Trump said he was still considering whether to go ahead with new sales to the ‌Chinese-claimed island.

Trump's meeting with China's Xi Jinping last week, where Taiwan was a point of focus, has caused concern in Taipei about the U.S. commitment to helping the island defend ‌itself. The U.S. is bound by law to provide Taiwan with weapons and in ‌December the Trump administration approved an $11 billion arms package, the largest ever. A second package worth some $14 billion has yet to be formally approved.

Speaking to reporters in parliament, Koo said the U.S. has repeatedly said ⁠its ​policy toward Taiwan has ⁠not changed. "For a long time, the United States has maintained peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait ⁠region through arms sales channels. This was established under the Taiwan Relations Act," he added, referring ​to the 1979 law that mandates arms sales.

Weapons sales are an important "counterbalancing force" ⁠for maintaining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait, Koo said. "It is clear that the side repeatedly ⁠provoking, ​creating incidents and undermining the peaceful and stable status quo in the Taiwan Strait is China, not our country," he added.

"Therefore, under these circumstances, we believe that maintaining ⁠this arms-sales channel is in line with U.S. interests," Koo said. Taiwan is continuing to talk ⁠to the ⁠U.S. about arms sales and "at present, we remain cautiously optimistic," he added.

Taiwan's government rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims, saying only the island's people can ‌decide their ‌future.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Give Feedback