Taiwan's Defense Budget Fight Is Exactly What Beijing Wants
The opposition KMT slashed the Lai administration's defense spending proposal by two-thirds. While Taipei argues with itself, China builds the force to blockade it.

Taiwan's opposition Kuomintang (KMT) released a special defense budget of 350 billion New Taiwan Dollars (approximately $11 billion), less than one-third of the Lai administration's proposed defense spending increase. The cut is the latest expression of a domestic political gridlock that has paralyzed Taipei's defense planning at the worst possible time: while the People's Liberation Army conducts its most extensive blockade rehearsals in history and the United States is distracted by a shooting war in the Middle East.
The Political Dysfunction
Taiwan's political system has produced a government that cannot govern on defense. President Lai Ching-te's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) holds the executive branch but faces a legislature controlled by the opposition KMT and the Taiwan People's Party. The KMT, which favors a more accommodating posture toward Beijing, has used its legislative majority to block defense spending increases, weapons procurement, and force structure reforms that the DPP considers essential.
The result is a country that faces the most serious military threat in its history while spending approximately 2.5 percent of GDP on defense, a figure that the United States, Taiwan's de facto security guarantor, has repeatedly criticized as inadequate. By comparison, South Korea spends 2.8 percent, Israel spends over 5 percent, and even Japan has committed to reaching 2 percent by 2027.
The KMT's position is that the DPP's defense spending proposals are provocative, that they will escalate cross-strait tensions, and that Taiwan's security is better served by diplomatic engagement with Beijing than by military buildup. This argument is not without internal logic. The problem is that Beijing has not reciprocated. Chinese military activity around Taiwan has increased, not decreased, regardless of which party holds power in Taipei.
What China Is Doing
In December 2025, the PLA conducted its most extensive military exercises simulating a Taiwan blockade: 14 warships, 14 coast guard vessels, an amphibious assault strike group, and 130 aircraft participated in operations that encircled Taiwan from multiple directions. The exercises were larger, more complex, and more operationally realistic than any previous drills.
Taiwan's coast guard is now preparing "push-back" protocols for the increasingly likely scenario in which Chinese vessels attempt to establish a physical presence in Taiwan's territorial waters, not as an exercise but as an assertion of sovereignty.
More ominously, the PLA Navy is reportedly preparing to launch its first Type 09V guided-missile nuclear submarine, a capability that would significantly enhance China's ability to threaten U.S. surface fleet operations in the western Pacific. A submarine-launched cruise missile capability gives China the means to hold American carrier strike groups at risk from positions that are difficult to detect and impossible to preemptively neutralize.
The 13 consecutive days without Chinese warplane incursions near Taiwan's airspace (February 27 through March 12) is the exception that proves the rule. Analysts have no clear explanation for the pause, but the most plausible interpretation is that Beijing is calibrating its pressure campaign for maximum effect at minimum diplomatic cost while the world's attention is focused on Iran.
The American Dilemma
The United States has maintained a policy of strategic ambiguity toward Taiwan for decades: providing weapons and training, but declining to state explicitly whether American forces would intervene in a Chinese attack. This ambiguity was designed to deter Beijing from attacking while simultaneously deterring Taipei from provoking a crisis.
The policy depends on Taiwan being a credible partner, one that invests in its own defense, maintains military readiness, and demonstrates the political will to fight. A Taiwan that cannot pass a defense budget undermines the entire framework. Why would the United States risk war with China to defend a country that will not adequately invest in defending itself?
This question is being asked with increasing frustration in Washington, and the Iran conflict has sharpened it. The United States is currently operating two carrier strike groups in the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea. It cannot simultaneously maintain that posture and keep sufficient naval forces in the western Pacific to deter Chinese adventurism. The implicit promise of American protection requires American presence, and American presence is currently elsewhere.
What Taipei Must Do
Taiwan's defense budget fight is not primarily a military problem. It is a political problem with military consequences. The DPP and KMT must reach a working agreement on defense spending that provides adequate funding for the asymmetric capabilities (anti-ship missiles, mines, mobile air defense, cyber warfare) that would make a Chinese invasion or blockade prohibitively costly.
This agreement will require compromise from both sides. The DPP must accept that defense spending increases above a certain level will be politically impossible without KMT buy-in. The KMT must accept that Taiwan's security environment has deteriorated to the point where engagement with Beijing is not a substitute for military preparedness.
The alternative to compromise is continued gridlock, continued underspending, and the gradual erosion of Taiwan's deterrent capability at a pace that is too slow for any single year to trigger alarm but that is cumulatively devastating over the course of a decade.
Beijing's strategists have always believed that time is on their side. Taiwan's political dysfunction is proving them right.
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