Taiwan plans to produce supersonic anti-ship missiles
TAIWAN: Taiwan plans to make 130 supersonic anti-ship missiles
beginning next year to counter rival China's continued naval buildup, a
newspaper and military expert said Wednesday.
The defense ministry has drafted the five-year project called "Chui
Feng" (Pursuing Wind) and plans to submit it to parliament for approval
later this year, the Liberty Times said.
The Hsiung Feng III missiles, designed to cruise at a maximum speed
of mach 2.0 with a range of up to 130 kilometers (78 miles), would be
installed on frigates and patrol boats, it said.
Developed by the military-run Chungshan Institute of Science and
Technology, the missiles would be used to fend off Chinese attacks
supposed to be launched from the Varyag - a stripped-down former Soviet
aircraft carrier bought by China - should war break out in the Taiwan
Strait, the paper said.
Taiwan would become the third country in Asia to be armed with
supersonic anti-ship missiles, the paper said. According to a previous
report in Jane's Defense Weekly, the Hsiung Feng III can be fitted with
a variety of guidance systems and function as an anti-ship, land-attack
or anti-radar missile.
The defense ministry declined to comment on the newspaper report.
A military expert said Taiwan had been working on the missile project
but while China had plans to operate an aircraft carrier, the ageing
Varyag was unlikely to meet its demands.
The "condition of Varyag is horrible. It could only be used for
training and study purposes," Wendell Minnick, Asia Bureau chief of the
US-based Defense News weekly, told AFP.
"They will have to build a new one on their own as they attempt to
operate a project force which can strike targets beyond their
territory," he said. It was not clear when China would commission its
first carrier, but Minnick said it was not likely to be anytime soon.
Taipei, Wednesday, AFP |