Taiwan's new top U.S. diplomat unaware of arms sale freeze

Fri Jul 25, 2008 3:38am EDT
 
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By Faith Hung

TAIPEI (Reuters) - Taiwan's top new diplomat to the United States said on Friday he is unaware of any U.S. freeze on arms sales to the island, despite conflicting media reports on the subject over the last two weeks.

The United States is Taiwan's top arms supplier, insisting the island needs to deter any potential attack from political archrival China, which considers Taiwan part of its territory and has threatened to take it back by force if necessary.

Recent reports in local and international media cited a top U.S. military official as saying the United States has instituted a freeze on new arms sales to Taiwan.

"There is no such word of a 'freeze' used by the Bush administration," said Jason Yuan, the new representative to the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States, which acts as Taiwan's de facto embassy.

"No one, particularly those in charge of the issue, told me they are going to freeze any arms sale," he told a news conference, adding he is confident a new arms sale will be approved shortly after he assumes his new position on August 4.

His remarks come two weeks after the head of the U.S. Pacific Command, Adm. Timothy Keating, was quoted as saying the United States has frozen new arms sales to Taiwan.

Keating said U.S. policymakers see no pressing need to sell advanced arms to Taiwan now.

A U.S. state department spokesman later appeared to backtrack on the matter, saying the U.S. position on arms sales to Taiwan has not changed.  Continued...

 

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