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             Congressional Research Service
             inforrning the iegislative debate since 1914




Taiwan: Defense and Military Issues


Updated March  1, 2024


U.S. policy toward Taiwan (which officially calls itself the
Republic of China or ROC, Taiwan) has long prioritized the
maintenance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.
The United States supports Taiwan's efforts to deter the
People's Republic of China (PRC or China) from using
force to gain control of the archipelago, which the PRC
claims as its territory. Increasingly, the U.S. government
has sought to strengthen its own ability to deter PRC
military aggression in Asia. Congress has passed several
laws aimed at strengthening U.S.-Taiwan defense ties. A
key challenge for U.S. policymakers is supporting Taiwan's
defense without triggering the conflict that U.S. policy
seeks to prevent. For additional background, see CRS In
Focus IF10275, Taiwan: Background  and U.S. Relations.


Figure I. Taiwan


Source: Graphic by CRS.


Taiwans Security Situation
Taiwan's technologically-advanced military is tasked with
deterring-and if necessary, defeating-PRC military
aggression. Taiwan enjoys strategic advantages, including
geography and climate. The Taiwan Strait is 70 nautical
miles (nm) wide at its narrowest point, and 220 nm wide at
its widest. Weather conditions make the Strait perilous to
navigate at certain times of the year. Taiwan's mountainous
terrain and densely populated coast are largely unsuitable
for amphibious landing and invasion operations. Taiwan's
leaders since 2017 have grown the defense budget; from
2019 to 2023, spending increased by an average of nearly
5%  per year, and as a percentage of GDP increased from
2%  to 2.5%. Defense spending is set to increase again in
2024, albeit at a slower rate. To increase readiness,
Taiwan's leaders announced plans to extend compulsory
military service from four months to a year and to expand
civil defense capabilities. Taiwan's defense relationship


with the United States also confers political and military
advantages.
Taiwan  faces an increasingly asymmetric power balance
across the Strait, however. The Communist Party of China's
military, the People's Liberation Army (PLA), has
undergone a decades-long modernization program focused
primarily on developing the capabilities needed to annex
Taiwan. Some  observers assess that the PLA is, or soon will
be, able to execute a range of military campaigns against
Taiwan. The PLA  trains for operations such as missile
strikes, seizures of Taiwan's small outlying islands,
blockades, and-the riskiest and most challenging
campaign  for the PLA-an  amphibious landing and
takeover of Taiwan's main island.

Taiwan  also faces defense challenges at home. Civil-
military relations are strained for historical, political, and
bureaucratic reasons. The archipelago's energy, food,
water, internet, and other critical infrastructure systems are
vulnerable to external disruption. According to some
observers, Taiwan's civil defense preparedness is
insufficient, and its military struggles to recruit, retain, and
train personnel. At a societal level, it is not clear what
costs-in terms of economic security, physical safety and
security, and lives-Taiwan's people would be willing or
able to bear in the face of possible PRC armed aggression.
U.S. officials have said a PRC invasion of Taiwan is
neither imminent nor inevitable. In 2023, U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency Director William J. Burns said PRC
leader Xi Jinping had instructed the PLA to be ready by
2027 to conduct a successful invasion. Now that does not
mean  that he's decided to conduct an invasion in 2027 or
any other year. But it's a reminder of the seriousness of his
focus and his ambition. Previously, some U.S. officials
had cited specific years in the mid-2020s as possible target
dates for an attack, renewing U.S. debates about how to
allocate limited resources to shore up Taiwan's resilience.

PRC   Gray Zone   Pressure  Against Taiwan
The PLA  engages in persistent non-combat operations that
some  analysts say are eroding Taiwan's military advantages
and readiness. Such gray zone actions include:

* large and increasingly complex exercises near Taiwan;
* near-daily air operations in the vicinity of Taiwan,
  including frequent sorties across the so-called median
  line, an informal north-south line bisecting the Strait that
  PLA  aircraft rarely crossed prior to 2022;
* routine naval patrols across the median line, some as
  close as 24 nm from Taiwan's main island; and
* unmanned  combat  aerial vehicle flights near and
  encircling Taiwan, and reported flights of unmanned

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