No New F-16’s for Taiwan, But U.S. to Upgrade Fleet
The Obama administration has decided not to sell F-16 fighter jets to Taiwan but instead to help it refurbish its existing fleet, prompting criticism in Congress that the United States is buckling to pressure from China.
The decision, which could be announced as early as this week and was shared with Congressional staff members on Friday, is a consolation prize for Taiwan, which wanted to buy 66 F-16’s to replace jets it bought in 1992 during the administration of the first President George Bush.
The administration’s calculation, people briefed on the decision said, is that upgrading the old jets would allow Taiwan to defend itself but would avoid opening a major rift with China, which regards Taiwan as a breakaway province and opposes any arms sales to the country.
That reasoning does not satisfy Taiwan’s supporters in Congress. “If the reports are true,” Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, said in a written statement on Friday, “today’s capitulation to Communist China by the Obama administration marks a sad day in American foreign policy, and it represents a slap in the face to a strong ally and longtime friend.”
Mr. Cornyn and Senator Robert Menendez, Democrat of New Jersey, introduced legislation last week requiring the United States to sell Taiwan the F-16’s under a 1979 law that requires Washington to provide the island with arms sufficient to defend itself.
Production of the F-16 generates hundreds of jobs in Texas, where the jets are assembled, and in New Jersey. Mr. Cornyn noted that the sale would provide jobs for “an American workforce that desperately needs them.”