Taiwan needs to go
asymmetrical
By J. Michael Cole ±FÁıN
The decision by the administration of US President Barack Obama to deny Taiwan
the F-16C/Ds it has been requesting since 2006 has implications that go well
beyond Taipei¡¦s inability to procure modern aircraft, as it raises questions
about the utility of almost every other arms sale the US has agreed to in recent
years.
Over the past decade, the balance of air power in the Taiwan Strait has steadily
shifted in Beijing¡¦s favor. During that period, the People¡¦s Liberation Army Air
Force (PLAAF) launched a dramatic aircraft modernization program, with the
result that it now enjoys a clear quantitative and qualitative advantage over
Taiwan in air combat capabilities.
Meanwhile, the number of short and medium-range ballistic missiles the Chinese
Second Artillery Corps aims at Taiwan ¡X including its airbases and airstrips ¡X
has also increased, reaching about 1,500 this year. Consequently, the number of
Taiwanese aircraft likely to survive an initial volley and be able to take off
from operational airstrips has diminished.
As the 66 F-16C/Ds sought by Taipei were to replace aging F-5E/Fs, failure to
acquire them means that the Taiwanese air force will find itself with fewer
aircraft, a shortfall that the US$5.3 billion upgrade to Taiwan¡¦s 145 F-16A/Bs
notified to US Congress on Wednesday will not make up for, even if it includes
joint direct attack munition (JDAM) laser-guided bomb kits, more powerful
engines and Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar.
Taiwan can no longer hope to achieve air superiority against the hundreds of
increasingly modern aircraft that have been added to the PLAAF in recent years.
This leads directly to the second problem confronting Taiwan as it seeks to
adjust its defense strategy. In his seminal study The Age of Airpower, military
historian Martin Van Creveld wrote that ¡§the old lesson, which had been
demonstrated so often since 1939 as to become axiomatic, [is] that no
large-scale conventional campaign is feasible in the teeth of enemy command of
the air.¡¨
Unable to ensure command of the air, Taiwan cannot hope to defeat China by
conventional military means, and yet its defense structure remains largely
conventional. Not only that, but the billions of US dollars in weapons that
Washington has agreed to sell Taiwan since 2001 are also part and parcel of a
conventional defense strategy. As such, Taiwan is spending billions of dollars
on platforms that, absent a credible air force, will only marginally enhance its
defensive capability. Such an outcome either stems from US failure to take a
long-term view of Taiwan¡¦s defense requirements, or a cynical approach to arms
sales that puts profit and job creation above its commitment to defend an ally.
Viewed in isolation, the major platforms that have been cleared for sale to
Taiwan in the past decade are impressive. They include the Patriot Advanced
Capability-3 (PAC-3) missile defense system, UH-60M Black Hawk utility
helicopters, P-3C Orion maritime patrol aircraft and AH-64D Apache Longbow
attack helicopters. Those items alone constitute an investment by Taiwan of
about US$12 billion, a very hefty check for the political symbolism attached to
US arms sales.
Had those armaments been complementary to a strengthening of Taiwan¡¦s air force,
the investment would have been worth it. However, on their own, they are mostly
sitting ducks, and costly ones at that. The highly expensive PAC-3, for example,
provides only limited area coverage (Taiwan is seeking a total of six fire
units), and given the number of missiles aimed at Taiwan, it would be easily
overwhelmed, especially as China introduces maneuverable ballistic missiles and
warheads equipped with multiple bomblets. The 60 Black Hawks and 12 P-3Cs Taiwan
has requested (US$3.1 billion and US$1.3 billion respectively) are slow and have
no ability to defend themselves against fighter aircraft. As for the Apache
helicopters, of which Taiwan has requested 30, for a total cost of US$2.53
billion, they are superb combat platforms, but their best use is to hide behind
hills or mountains, emerge briefly to launch their missiles at approaching
ground or surface targets, and immediately go back into hiding. Without air
cover,they, too, are sitting ducks, unable to defend themselves against aerial
assault.
In the face of US refusals to sell Taiwan
more advanced F-16s, some Taiwanese defense officials, including Deputy Minister
of National Defense Andrew Yang (·¨©À¯ª), have hinted that Taipei could make a
request for the fifth-generation F-35. The aircraft, which has vertical and/or
short take-off and landing (V/STOL) capabilities, could resolve the problem of
survivability following a missile attack, as it requires very little runway and
can easily be concealed.
In about 2004 or 2005, Taipei approached the US seeking to become a Security
Cooperation Participant for the development of the F-35, and even offered to
inject US$25 million into the consortium. Washington rejected that offer. At the
time, officials in the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) administration of
then-president Chen Shui-bian (³¯¤ô«ó) already feared that this could be a
non-starter. Even today, the unit cost of the problem-plagued F-35 ¡X estimates
vary from US$65 million to US$80 million ¡X would probably deter Taipei.
With the F-35 beyond reach, the even more expensive F-22 no longer in production
and other suppliers unwilling to defy China by selling advanced military
hardware to Taiwan, Taipei is left with two options: Either it embarks on a
crash program to develop and produce a modern combat aircraft ¡X perhaps with US
assistance, as occurred with the Indigenous Defense Fighter ¡X or it abandons its
strategy of countering China by conventional military means and adopts an
asymmetrical program.
One area worth exploring to increase deterrent is the development of land attack
cruise missiles (LACM). Taiwan has worked at developing those, including the
600km Hsiung Feng IIE. By strategically placing firing units, preferably mobiles
ones, on Taiwan proper and its outlying islands, Taiwan could pose a high cost
to any attack by China.
However, Taiwan faces a bottleneck in its ability to produce smaller, high-yield
and longer-range warheads. This is largely the fault of the US Department of
State, which has blocked the transfer of sensitive missile components to Taipei
under Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) rules and self-imposed limits on
the transfer of ¡§offensive¡¨ weapons to Taiwan. Lobbying Washington to lift those
restrictions would be a step in the right direction.
However, LACMs are not the final answer, as they are slow, and the Chinese
military has been developing, acquiring and fielding anti-aircraft artillery,
radar and very capable infrared sensors that can shoot them down.
Another solution, some defense analysts posit, would be for the US to sell the
Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) to Taiwan, a 300km-range maneuverable
artillery rocket that can take skeet submunitions to target enemy invasion
gathering points or surface-to-air missile sites across the Taiwan Strait.
If Taiwan is unable to modernize its fleet of aircraft and acquire new ones in
sufficient numbers, a good defense strategy would be to save the billions of
dollars it risks wasting and use that money to acquire and develop asymmetrical
means to effectively counter China.
J. Michael Cole is deputy news editor at the Taipei Times.
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