US approves US$345 million landmark military aid package for Taiwan

The White House has announced a landmark US$345 million military aid package for Taiwan, allowing weapons to be draw directly from US stockpiles and sent to the island.

It is the first package of its kind since Washington switched official recognition to Beijing from Taipei in 1979 and follows repeated requests by Congress in the past few years.

"By the authority vested in me as president ... I hereby delegate to the secretary of state the authority ... to direct the drawdown of up to US$345 million in defence articles and services ... and military education and training, to ... Taiwan," Joe Biden said on Friday.

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The package was authorised under the presidential drawdown authority, which has been used to urgently channel security assistance to US allies, including Ukraine.

The authority allows the president to swiftly transfer articles and services from American stockpiles under the US Foreign Assistance Act of 1961.

It is the first time it has been used to transfer weapons and military aid to Taiwan.

As a part of the 2023 budget, the US Congress authorised up to US$1 billion in military aid to Taiwan via the drawdown authority, a decision Beijing attacked at the time.

The package is in addition to US$10 billion in no-interest loans for Taiwan.

According to the secretary of state, the drawdown this time included "defence articles and services of the Department of Defence, and military education and training, to ... Taiwan".

The foreign ministry in Beijing had not commented on the decision by Saturday afternoon.

Wang Kung-yi, head of the Taiwan International Strategic Study Society, a Taipei think tank, said the move was expected to further anger Beijing.

"The mainland is already upset by US arms sales to Taiwan and it is expected to react with stronger action over the free weapons to Taipei," Wang said.

Liu Pengyu, a spokesman for China's embassy in Washington, said in a statement on Friday that Beijing "firmly opposed" US military ties with Taiwan.

The US should "stop selling arms to Taiwan" and "stop creating new factors that could stoke tensions in the Taiwan Strait", he said.

Taiwan has complained about frequent US delays in weapon deliveries to the island - a situation that it says could increase the risk to the self-ruled island from mainland China's rapid military expansion and sabre rattling.