Taiwan Fires U.S.-Supplied Rockets Toward China in Military Exercise
Taiwan carried out a military drill Wednesday in Taichung City using American-supplied HIMARS rocket systems, marking the first occasion the weapons fired across the Taiwan Strait in the direction of China.
The High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, or HIMARS, represents a key component of Taiwan's military arsenal. The U.S. has provided the island with the weapons platform as part of ongoing military support amid escalating tensions across the Taiwan Strait.
During the exercise, Taiwan's military launched rounds from the HIMARS units as part of standard training operations. The drill demonstrated Taiwan's operational capacity with the system and its ability to conduct live-fire exercises in contested waters.
The exercise comes amid broader military activity in the region. China has ramped up military pressure on Taiwan in recent years, conducting air and naval operations near the island. Taiwan, in turn, has expanded its military training regimen and sought to strengthen its defense capabilities.
The U.S. maintains a policy of providing defensive weapons to Taiwan under the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979, which obligates Washington to supply the island with military equipment necessary for self-defense. The HIMARS system falls within that framework.
Taiwan's government has emphasized the importance of military readiness and training as deterrence against potential Chinese military action. The drill Wednesday aligned with that stated policy of maintaining combat readiness through regular exercises.
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