NEED TO KNOW
- Trump told Fox News a held-up $14 billion arms package "depends on China."
- He dismissed the 1982 Six Assurances policy as outdated, openly questioning it on air.
- Taiwan's parliament approved $25 billion to fund the package earlier this month.
WASHINGTON (TDR) — President Trump told Fox News on Friday that arms sales to Taiwan are a "very good negotiating chip" in U.S. dealings with China, leaving a $14 billion weapons package in limbo immediately after his Beijing summit with Xi Jinping.
The big picture: The framing converts a statutory U.S. defense commitment into transactional leverage against an undefined Chinese concession.
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- Asked if he would approve the package, Trump said: "I'm holding that in abeyance and it depends on China."
- The Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 requires the U.S. to provide Taiwan with defensive arms
- Trump separately approved an $11 billion package in December; Beijing responded with live-fire drills around the island
Why it matters: Trump also openly dismissed a 1982 commitment that the U.S. would not consult China on Taiwan arms sales.
- Confronted on the Six Assurances, Trump said: "What am I going to do, say I don't want to talk to you about it because I have an agreement wrote in 1982?"
- Xi warned Trump on Thursday of "clashes and even conflicts" if Taiwan is not "handled properly"
- Russian President Putin travels to Beijing next week; Xi visits Washington September 24
Driving the news: Trump's remarks went beyond the arms package, echoing Beijing's line on Taiwan's elected president.
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- He suggested President Lai Ching-te's government "wants to go independent" because they "want to get into a war"
- Trump renewed his call for Taiwan's chipmakers to relocate, calling it "the greatest thing you can do"
- TSMC has committed $165 billion to an Arizona campus; Taiwan pledged $250 billion in U.S. chip investment under an earlier deal
What they're saying:
- Donald Trump, U.S. President — "It's a very good negotiating chip for us, frankly. It's a lot of weapons."
- Karen Kuo, Taiwan Presidential Office Spokesperson — "The Republic of China is a sovereign, independent, democratic country; Beijing's claims are therefore without merit."
- William Yang, International Crisis Group — "Taiwan, instead of being at the negotiating table, is on the menu."
Yes, but: Trump did not change formal U.S. policy on Taiwan, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio affirmed the position as "unchanged".
- Taiwan's parliament approved $25 billion this month to fund both the $14 billion package and the earlier $11 billion tranche
- Atlantic Council's Wen-Ti Sung called the comments possible "transactional rhetoric being turned up to the max" rather than substantive policy
- CSIS analysts noted China views the October Busan truce as "relatively favorable" to Beijing, complicating any read of new leverage
Between the lines: The Taiwan Relations Act and the 1982 Six Assurances are the load-bearing commitments under which Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, and the Philippines have built their security postures for four decades. Trump did not just decline to approve a weapons package. He said on camera that a 44-year-old assurance binding U.S. negotiating conduct is outdated because he disagrees with it. Whether that's deal-making leverage or a credible signal to allies is the open question, and it will be read very differently in Taipei than in Beijing.
What's next:
- Putin arrives in Beijing for talks next week; Xi state visit to Washington scheduled September 24
- $14 billion arms package remains in abeyance; Taiwan parliament has already funded it
- Capitol Hill hawks expected to press for movement; restraint-faction Republicans likely to defend
- Taiwan's January 2028 presidential election cycle now begins under deeper U.S. ambiguity
If the U.S. holds the line on Taiwan's defense to deter China, who decides when a four-decade strategic commitment becomes negotiable — and what should America accept in return for relaxing it?
Sources
This report was compiled using reporting from PBS News / AP, Axios, Fortune, HuffPost, and CBS News
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