logo
HIMARS Unleashed in Taiwan as China Watches On

HIMARS Unleashed in Taiwan as China Watches On

Miami Herald13-05-2025
Taiwan, a self-ruled island under China's threat of force, conducted its first live-fire exercise with the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) supplied by the United States.
Newsweek has reached out to the Chinese Defense Ministry for comment by email.
Communist China has claimed that Taiwan is an "inalienable part" of its territory, while its leader, President Xi Jinping, has vowed that China will "never promise to renounce the use of force" against the sovereign democracy, a U.S. security partner in the Indo-Pacific region.
The U.S. has maintained an unofficial relationship with Taiwan, after establishing diplomatic ties with China in 1979. Washington has also continued to supply "defensive weapons" to Taipei under the Taiwan Relations Act, making it the island's largest source of foreign arms.
The Taiwanese military on Monday conducted a live-fire drill at Jiupeng Base in southern Pingtung County, marking the debut of the HIMARS on the island and demonstrating its "rapid deployment and next-generation strike capabilities," Taipei's defense ministry said.
Taiwan's Central News Agency reported that 11 HIMARS launchers participated in the drill, each firing three rockets. Taiwan ordered a total of 29 launchers from the U.S., with the first 11 delivered last year and the remaining scheduled for delivery next year, the report added.
According to U.S. defense contractor Lockheed Martin, each HIMARS launcher can fire two types of munitions: either six Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS) rockets or a single ATACMS ballistic missile, formally known as the Army Tactical Missile System.
The GMLRS rocket, armed with a 200-pound warhead, has a range of over 43 miles, while the ATACMS missile can strike targets up to 186 miles away with a 500-pound warhead.
The HIMARS, which has proven its effectiveness in Ukraine's war against Russia, could be deployed to target Fujian-a Chinese province facing Taiwan-in the event of a conflict across the 110-mile-wide Taiwan Strait, a strategic waterway separating China and Taiwan.
Citing Taiwanese Army Colonel Ho Chih-chung, who is the deputy commander of the 58th Artillery Command, Lockheed Martin has also dispatched its personnel to Jiupeng Base to assist with technical issues during the live-fire exercise, the Central News Agency reported.
The U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency said: "[Taiwan] will use this capability as a deterrent to regional threats and to strengthen homeland defense. Acquisition of HIMARS will contribute to [Taiwan's] goal of updating its military capability while further enhancing interoperability with the United States and other allies."
The Chinese Defense Ministry said: "We urge the U.S. side to ... immediately stop arming Taiwan ... Several pieces of U.S. weaponry won't be the magic straw that can save a drowning man; they are nothing but easy targets on the battlefields."
Lockheed Martin said: "Adversaries around the globe are becoming more sophisticated ... The Lockheed Martin HIMARS is a strategic capability, improving homeland and important asset defense while reducing overall mission costs."
It remains to be seen whether Taiwan will place additional orders for HIMARS, as the U.S. had suggested the island increase its defense spending to help deter a Chinese attack.
Related Articles
Photos Show US Preparing Frontline Base for China Missile WarUS Ally Intercepts Chinese Spy Ships Near CoastVideo Shows Coast Guard Using Water Cannon Against Chinese ShipChina Learns Valuable Lessons About War With America: Analysts
2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chinese carrier Shandong moors in Hong Kong on 'great power' visit
Chinese carrier Shandong moors in Hong Kong on 'great power' visit

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Chinese carrier Shandong moors in Hong Kong on 'great power' visit

China's first domestically built aircraft carrier sailed into Hong Kong on Thursday, just days after the city marked 28 years under Chinese rule. The Shandong, measuring more than 300 metres (1,000 feet) and commissioned in 2019, is China's second carrier and is central to its regional ambitions under President Xi Jinping, who has overseen a massive naval buildup that has rattled Asian neighbours. Beijing has said the Shandong and its escort vessels, which include the destroyers Zhanjiang and Yanan and the frigate Yuncheng, will visit the Chinese finance hub for five days and host "tours and cultural exchange activities". The Shandong's visit came days after it concluded combat drills in the western Pacific alongside China's first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning. It anchored at the western edge of Hong Kong's Victoria Harbour while the escorts berthed at the People's Liberation Army naval base on Stonecutters Island on the northern side of the famous waterway. City leader John Lee said at a welcoming ceremony that the visit would let the public "experience the magnificence and sophistication of the country's modern warships". The PLA navy "not only protects national sovereignty, security and territorial integrity, but is also an important force for regional peace and stability," Lee said. The Shandong and the Liaoning are both of a modified Soviet design, with J-15 fighter jets and helicopters seen on the Shandong's distinctive "ski jump" deck on Thursday. China's third and more advanced carrier, the Fujian, is undergoing sea trials. Tickets to visit the vessels in Hong Kong were snapped up within minutes on social media app WeChat. - 'Great power' - Crowds flocked to the waterfront and nearby hillsides on Thursday morning to catch a glimpse of the vessels. City officials set up a restricted flying zone over parts of the harbour and temporarily reduced ferry services. The Shandong is the second Chinese aircraft carrier to visit Hong Kong, following a 2017 visit by the Liaoning. "The idea appears to be to impress upon the Hong Kong public... the ruling (Chinese Communist Party's) quest for building what's termed as the status of a maritime great power," said Collin Koh, a naval affairs specialist at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. China has rapidly upgraded its naval forces as it seeks to expand its reach in the Pacific and challenge a US-led alliance. The US Department of Defense said in a December report that China numerically has the largest navy in the world, with a battle force of more than 370 ships and submarines. Japanese authorities said China's dual-carrier exercise in the Pacific last month was the first of its kind and reflected Beijing's intentions to improve operational capabilities in distant areas. Chong Ja Ian of the National University of Singapore said China's latest exercises suggest "both aircraft carriers are ready to engage in more sophisticated operations" but some unknowns remain, including the operational tempo they can bear. The Shandong was reportedly present in Philippine waters in April during a joint US-Philippines military exercise, deepening tensions between Manila and Beijing over disputed territorial claims in the South China Sea. In that same month, the vessel also took part in drills testing the Chinese navy's ability to "blockade" Taiwan, according to the Eastern Theater Command. China insists that the self-ruled democracy is part of its territory and has refused to rule out seizing the island by force. isk-hol/pbt/dhc

Trump's Vietnam Deal Shows China Tariffs Won't Fall Much Further
Trump's Vietnam Deal Shows China Tariffs Won't Fall Much Further

Bloomberg

time21 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Trump's Vietnam Deal Shows China Tariffs Won't Fall Much Further

President Donald Trump's new trade deal with Vietnam sends a clear signal about where US tariffs on Chinese goods might ultimately land, as talks between Washington and Beijing continue following their recent truce. Chinese goods currently face tariffs of around 55%, a level expected to remain through August. But under the latest Vietnam agreement, the US will slap a 20% tariff on Vietnamese exports to the US and a steeper 40% levy on goods deemed to be transshipped — the latter targeting a well-worn backdoor used by Chinese exporters since the first China-US trade war to dodge American tariffs.

DOJ Antitrust chief is betting American tech will beat China
DOJ Antitrust chief is betting American tech will beat China

New York Post

time29 minutes ago

  • New York Post

DOJ Antitrust chief is betting American tech will beat China

Gail Slater, Donald Trump's head of antitrust, is tasked with a formidable agenda that requires precision: Foster a business-friendly environment that lets tech companies stay big enough to compete with China while ensuring they don't become excessively dominant. 'It's about enforcing antitrust robustly in a way that works for all Americans … that's my starting point,' Slater, 53, told me in her first interview since taking on her role as Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division at the Department of Justice a little over 100 days ago. Slater took over a serious docket of cases that includes suits against Google, in regards to search and ad tech; Apple, for its smartphone market dominance; Visa, in relation to debit card payment processing; and Live Nation/Ticketmaster and its live entertainment business. 4 Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division Gail Slater tells me the crux of her job is 'enforcing antitrust robustly in a way that works for all Americans.' Bloomberg via Getty Images While she won't comment on the status of those cases, she's been a key advisor urging Trump to stay the course on antitrust enforcement — despite tech companies' efforts to sway him. (When I asked how frequently she discusses agenda with President Trump, she told me, 'We get a lot of signals from the White House in the form of Executive Orders.') Slater is deeply committed and believes aggressive antitrust enforcement can benefit consumers in countless ways — even on seemingly unrelated issues. 'Speech and the censorship of speech can be downstream of [tech companies] market power,' she noted. Not everyone on the right agrees with her. Some Republicans, like Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), believe the US government should tread lightly with tech companies. They worry that too much regulation could unintentionally give China a dangerous advantage when it comes to artificial intelligence. 4 While tech titans, like Meta's Mark Zuckerberg (far left) and Google's Sundar Pichai (center in glasses) have cozied up to the Trump Administration, they aren't immune to regulation. AP But Slater feels antitrust efforts could actually give the US a leg-up. 'Companies competing against one another innovate. That's the free market at its finest,' she explained. 'We can win the AI race against the Chinese without becoming like China… we will win the global race to AI the American way.' Bringing cases against massive companies can cost millions, making Slater's job — at a time when everyone in the federal government is under the gun to cut costs — especially challenging. 'The big tech cases alone are a huge, huge lift, both from a human resource standpoint, a scale standpoint when it comes to documents and experts and how we put those cases on a trial,' Slater said. This story is part of NYNext, an indispensable insider insight into the innovations, moonshots and political chess moves that matter most to NYC's power players (and those who aspire to be). Her efforts, she said, have to be 'low resource, high return on investment things.' And even though she is focused on ending unfair monopolies, she's also trying to implement as many pro-business policies as she can. On the front end, Slater is now allowing early terminations to the (previously) mandatory 30-day waiting period for mergers to close on deals the DOJ deems benign. Since taking the helm, she has granted 58 of 322 filings, worth $71 billion. 'In particular, we are taking settlements in merger cases where the previous administration took none,' she said. 4 Gail Slater is now allowing early terminations to the (previously) mandatory 30-day waiting period for mergers to close on deals the DOJ deems benign REUTERS At the back end of deals, she has embraced the use of consent decrees — allowing parties to resolve competitive overlaps by divesting assets to qualified buyers, a practice the prior administration largely avoided. 'We listened hard to concerns that Wall Street and others had about the policy of the prior administration on deal flow,' she told me of efforts to simplify rules where she can. 'We inherited a historic docket and we want to be responsible stewards of that, But we're also setting [the agenda] by fixing the merger review process to make it more transparent, to make work better for deal makers.' Slater, who is soft-spoken, jokes 'this is me raising my voice' when talking about the efforts they've already made to cut over-regulation. She has also teamed up with the Federal Trade Commission to eradicate what she describes as 'useless' regulations. 'We opened up a docket and we said to anybody interested with expertise in the area, tell us the regulations that you're aware that are hindering competition — and the ways in which that could be fixed. Because we want to support free market competition,' Slater said. 'That's the goal here.' 4 In a Truth Social post, Donald Trump made it clear that fighting Big Tech is a key priority for Slater. Donald J. Trump / Truth Social Another tool is using amicus briefs to strategically influence federal court cases, like they have done in Texas v. BlackRock — a high-profile antitrust lawsuit where states allege major investors like BlackRock colluded to reduce coal production, raising energy prices. She said it is a way of supporting American companies and administration policies with relatively inexpensive but high-impact interventions. Slater, who was born in Dublin and studied at Oxford, moved to the US in 2003 and worked as a trial attorney at the FTC for a decade. She held positions at the Internet Association, Fox Corporation, Roku and, during the first Trump administration, the National Economic Council, before advising JD Vance on antitrust issues while he was an Ohio senator. She's excited moving beyond the cases left to her by her predecessor. 'A priority for me is health care,' she told me. 'We're looking to set a positive agenda around drug pricing and health care more broadly. Send NYNext a tip: nynextlydia@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store