Congress-Approved Taiwan Arms Deal Stalled as Trump
Courts Xi
The
package worth billions of dollars and endorsed by lawmakers is stalled at the State
Department as the U.S. and China plan an April summit.
Key
Points
·
Sale
Package: $13 billion
arms deal for Taiwan, including Patriot interceptor missiles, NASAMS, anti-drone
systems, small arms, and sustainment items.
·
Congress
Approval: Bipartisan
lawmakers informally approved the package in January; normally followed by quick
public announcement.
·
White
House Delay: Trump
administration ordered State Department to hold back, aiming to avoid upsetting
Xi Jinping ahead of April summit in Beijing.
·
Xi’s
Warning: In a Feb.
4 call, Xi told Trump arms sales to Taiwan are the “most important issue” in U.S.-China
relations and warned against separation of Taiwan from China.
·
Diplomatic
Risk: Experts say
consulting China before arms sales may violate the Six Assurances (1982),
a cornerstone of U.S.-Taiwan policy.
·
Strategic
Context: Despite
strong bipartisan support for Taiwan under the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, Trump
has shown dismissiveness toward Taiwan in private, while easing semiconductor export
restrictions to China.
·
Pattern
of Hesitation: Trump
administration previously bypassed Congress to expedite arms sales to Israel, but
now stalls Taiwan package despite advanced approval.
·
Summit
Priority: Trump prioritizes
smooth relations with Xi and a successful Beijing summit over immediate defense
support for Taiwan.
[ABS
News Service/02.03.2026]
The
Trump administration has delayed announcing a package of arms sales to Taiwan valued
at billions of dollars to avoid upsetting Xi Jinping,
China’s leader, ahead of President Trump’s planned trip to Beijing in April, U.S. officials said.
The
weapons sale, which includes air-defense missiles, is in an advanced stage. Senior
Republican and Democratic lawmakers approved the package after the State Department
sent it to them in January for informal review.
However,
since then, the sales package has languished in the State Department, the officials
said. Administration officials have told some involved in the approval of the sale
that the White House ordered agencies not to move forward to ensure that Mr. Trump
has a successful summit with Mr. Xi, one official said.
Another
official said the package has a total value of about $13 billion, compared with
the $11 billion sale
that the Trump administration announced in December. The U.S. officials spoke to
The New York Times on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomatic
and security matters.
The
State Department said it does not comment on pending arms sales. “This administration
has been very clear that the enduring U.S. commitment to Taiwan continues, as it
has for over four decades,” it said in a statement.
The
White House referred questions to the State Department.
The
topic of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan came up in a Feb. 4 call between Mr. Trump and
Mr. Xi, according to a summary of the conversation from Chinese state news organizations.
“The
U.S. must handle arms sales to Taiwan with extreme caution,” Mr. Xi told Mr. Trump,
according to the summary. Mr. Xi also warned Mr. Trump that the U.S. position on
Taiwan was “the most important issue in China-U.S. relations” and that China “will
never allow Taiwan to be separated from China.”
In
a social media post that day, Mr. Trump listed the issue of Taiwan among more than
a half-dozen topics, and said the call was “all very positive.” The two leaders
have been planning to meet in Beijing this spring, which would be the first time
since they talked in person
last October in Busan, South Korea. They agreed in Busan to a yearlong truce in
a trade war that Mr. Trump had started. The thorny subject of Taiwan, a democratic
island with de facto independence that is claimed by China, did not come up.
On
Feb. 16, Mr. Trump told reporters that he was considering what to do about arms
sales to Taiwan, given that Mr. Xi opposes them.
“I’m
talking to him about it,” he said aboard Air Force One.
Mr.
Trump did not clarify what he meant by that. Some experts on U.S.-China policy said
Mr. Trump could be violating a diplomatic agreement called the Six Assurances,
a pillar of U.S.-Taiwan and U.S.-China policies. Those assurances were sent by the
Reagan administration to Taiwan’s president in 1982, and one is generally understood
to say that the U.S. government would not consult with China before an arms sale
to Taiwan.
The
proposed package includes interceptor missiles for Patriot air-defense launchers,
anti-drone equipment and NASAMS, another missile-based air-defense system, an official
said. There are also small arms and maintenance and sustainment items.
The
Financial Times first reported on the compiling of an arms package, and The Wall Street Journal later reported
on hesitation among U.S. officials to move forward with it.
The
fact that the Trump administration has halted the package at an advanced stage of
the process, after informal approval from Congress, has not been previously reported.
In
general, the State Department sends proposed arms packages to a Senate committee
and a House committee to be reviewed by the top lawmakers from both parties on those
panels. If the lawmakers grant informal approval, then the department generally
announces the sale publicly soon afterward and sends the package to Congress for
pro forma official approval.
The
informal approval stage is significant. For example, Democratic congressional officials
have spent weeks or months scrutinizing arms sales to Israel in recent years, as criticism has grown of the Israeli military’s
killing of civilians in Gaza during a retaliation campaign against Hamas for its
October 2023 attacks. The Trump administration has bypassed Congress three times to expedite arms shipments to Israel.
U.S.
arms support for Taiwan has strong bipartisan support in Congress, and the 1979
Taiwan Relations Act obligates administrations to sell weapons of a defensive nature
to the island. Lawmakers often quickly give approval to such packages.
Although
senior U.S. officials pushed in the first Trump administration to bolster ties to the island, Mr. Trump has been dismissive of Taiwan
in private, according to a memoir by John R. Bolton, a national security adviser
in the first term.
By
contrast, Mr. Trump has consistently expressed admiration for Mr. Xi, whom he calls
a “very good friend,” even as he views China as a formidable trade rival. At the
urging of U.S. businesses, he recently eased restrictions on the export of advanced
semiconductor chips to China.