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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
World

Taiwan needs ‘hornets’ nest’ of drones, says US diplomat

Visitors look at a Ghost-X unmanned aerial vehicle developed by the US-based company Anduril, during the Taipei Aerospace and Defence Technology Exhibition in Taipei, on Sept 19, 2025. (Photo: Reuters)

TAICHUNG - ‌Taiwan needs a “hornets’ nest” of drones to help deter conflict and provide security, the top US diplomat to the democratically governed island said on Thursday.

The United States, Taiwan’s most important international backer and arms supplier despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties, ​has strongly backed the ⁠government’s military modernisation plan and increased defence spending.

Taiwan says it needs to bolster its defences in the face of a stepped-up threat from China, which views the island as its ‌own territory.

Speaking at a forum on drones in the central city of Taichung, Raymond Greene, director of the American Institute in Taiwan and the de facto US ambassador, said drones represented a “game-changing opportunity” to ⁠enhance Taiwan’s security and reinforce peace in the broader region.

The US and Taiwan can anchor “democratic” drone production and strengthen the collective deterrence posture of the free world, Greene said.

“Fortunately for Taiwan, drones have significantly boosted defenders, even when facing overwhelming odds,” he added, referring to the war in Ukraine.

“Nothing will deter conflict ​more effectively than turning Taiwan into a hornets’ nest of air, surface and subsurface drones.”

While Taiwan’s government has prioritised drones and other asymmetric systems, in May the ​opposition-dominated ‌parliament passed only two-thirds of the US$40 billion in extra defence spending that President Lai Ching-te had asked for, earmarking funds only for US arms.

The government has now proposed ​a ⁠new, $6.6-billion package for surveillance, coastal attack and small unmanned surface drones to the end of 2031.

The Kuomintang (KMT), Taiwan’s main opposition ⁠party, this week proposed its own drone legislation, with a spending cap set at $7.5 billion over six years. Its plan would fund drones from the main budget rather than a special ⁠budget, which is what the government wants.

On Wednesday, President Lai ​Ching-te said the need for drones was pressing. “Facing changes in the geopolitical situation and the evolution of modern warfare, building asymmetric combat capabilities is a national defence project that is a race against time,” he told a meeting of ‌his Democratic Progressive Party.

Lai ⁠rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying that only ​the island’s people can decide their future.

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