Taiwan to extend conscription to combat rising threat from China

Taipei: Taiwan will extend compulsory military service from four months to one year from 2024 to combat a rising threat the democratically governed island faces from its neighbour China, President Tsai Ing-wen said on Tuesday (local time).

The move, which had been well-flagged and will affect men aged 18 and over, comes as China ramps up military, diplomatic and economic pressure on Taiwan to assert its sovereignty claims, including almost daily Chinese air force missions near the island over the past three years.

Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen during a news conference at the Presidential Palace in Taipei on Tuesday.Credit:Bloomberg

Tsai said Taiwan wanted peace but needed to be able to defend itself.

“As long as Taiwan is strong enough, it will be the home of democracy and freedom all over the world, and it will not become a battlefield,” Tsai said, adding that the decision to extend the conscription period was “incredibly difficult”.

The current military system, including training reservists, is inefficient and insufficient to cope with China’s rising military threat, especially if it launched a rapid attack on the island, Tsai said.

“Taiwan wants to tell the world that between democracy and dictatorship, we firmly believe in democracy. Between war and peace, we insist on peace,” she said.

“Let us show the courage and determination to protect our homeland and defend democracy.”

Conscripts will undergo more intense training, including shooting exercises, combat instruction and guidance on operating powerful weapons such as Stinger anti-aircraft missiles and anti-tank missiles, Tsai said.

Taiwan has complained of delayed US arms deliveries during 2022, but Tsai said the situation was improving after discussions with the United States.

The de facto US embassy in Taiwan welcomed the announcement on conscription reform.

“The United States’ commitment to Taiwan and steps Taiwan takes to enhance its self-defence capabilities contribute to the maintenance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and within the region,” the American Institute in Taiwan said.

Tsai’s security team, including high-level officials from the defence ministry and the National Security Council, have been reviewing Taiwan’s military system since 2020, an official briefed on the matter told Reuters.

Taipei, which rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims to Taiwan, on Monday reported the largest-ever Chinese air force incursion into the island’s air defence identification zone.

China also staged war games near Taiwan in August following a visit to Taipei by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Conscripts would be tasked with guarding key infrastructure, enabling regular forces to respond more swiftly in the event of any attempt by China to invade, the defence ministry said.

Chieh Chung, researcher at the National Policy Foundation, a Taipei-based think tank, estimated that the extension could add an extra 60,000 to 70,000 military personnel annually to the current 165,000-strong professional force from 2027.

However, even after the extension, the period of service will still be shorter than the 18 months mandated in South Korea, which faces a hostile and nuclear-armed North Korea.

Tsai is overseeing a broad modernisation programme, championing the idea of “asymmetric warfare” to make the island’s forces more mobile, agile and harder to attack.

While the United States has pressed Taiwan to modernise its military to make it like a “porcupine” – agile and hard to attack – Tsai said there had been no pressure from Washington for these reforms.

China’s growing assertiveness towards the island it claims as its own, as well as the war in Ukraine, have prompted debate within Taiwan about how to boost defence.

Tsai said various learnings from the Ukraine war had been incorporated into Taiwan’s defence reforms. She noted that Ukraine’s ability to hold off much larger Russian forces had given the international community time to render assistance.

Reuters

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