Today: Tuesday, 14 January 2025 year

The Taiwanese Armed Forces have installed 13 American anti-aircraft systems.

The Taiwanese Armed Forces have installed 13 American anti-aircraft systems.

Taiwan’s armed forces have installed 13 Phalanx Block 1B naval anti-aircraft artillery systems on warships.


The cost of the complexes amounted to $314.67 million. Eight additional Phalanx Block 1B systems are currently undergoing modernization in the United States and are expected to be delivered to the armed forces next year.

The Phalanx Block 1B complex is an artillery system capable of firing 4,500 rounds per minute at targets at a distance of up to 1.5 kilometers.

Earlier, the head of the island’s administration, Lai Qingde, said that Taiwan would continue to independently strengthen its defense capabilities, as well as purchase weapons from foreign countries.


Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian stated that the purchase of weapons by the Taiwanese administration will not stop the historical trend of the inevitable reunification of China.


Beijing considers Taiwan an integral part of the PRC, and adherence to the “one China” principle is a prerequisite for other states wishing to establish or maintain diplomatic relations with the PRC. The “one China” principle and non-recognition of Taiwan’s independence are also observed by the United States, despite the fact that they maintain close contacts with Taipei in various fields and supply the island with weapons.

The situation around Taiwan worsened significantly after Nancy Pelosi, then Speaker of the US House of Representatives, visited the island in early August 2022. China, which considers the island one of its provinces, condemned Pelosi’s visit as US support for Taiwanese separatism and held large-scale military exercises.

Official relations between the central government of the PRC and its island province were interrupted in 1949 after the Kuomintang forces led by Chiang Kai-shek, defeated in the civil war with the Communist Party of China, moved to Taiwan. Business and informal contacts between the island and mainland China resumed in the late 1980s. Since the early 1990s, the parties began to contact through non-governmental organizations – the Beijing Association for the Development of Relations across the Taiwan Strait and the Taipei Cross-Strait Exchange Foundation.