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US commander warns Taiwan not to ‘starve the chicken’ on defense

By Thomson Reuters Apr 21, 2026 | 11:51 AM

By David Brunnstrom and Michael Martina

WASHINGTON, April 21 (Reuters) – The head of the U.S. command for the Indo-Pacific region on Tuesday stressed the importance of Taiwan passing its stalled ​defense budget, saying the United States “can’t want Taiwan’s defense more ‌than they want it itself.”

“It’s not a chicken and the egg, because you’re not going to get chicken or eggs if you starve the chicken,” Admiral Samuel Paparo told a hearing of the Senate Committee on Armed ‌Services.

“So ​it’s very important for them to fund ⁠their own defense,” he said, ⁠when asked about the stalled talks.

Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te last year proposed $40 billion in extra defense spending to counter China, which views the island as its own territory.

Taiwan’s parliament, where ​the opposition Kuomintang (KMT) party has a majority, is continuing to debate the government’s plan and competing, less expensive proposals.

Washington is obliged ⁠under U.S. law to provide Taiwan ⁠with the means to defend itself, and American senators ​have sought to reassure Taiwan that the U.S. will approve another ​round of arms sales worth as much as $14 billion ‌soon.

A group of 37 bipartisan U.S. lawmakers wrote to senior Taiwanese politicians in February expressing concern about the parliament stalling defense spending plans and a separate group of U.S. lawmakers gave a similar ⁠message during a subsequent visit to Taipei.

“We did secure private assurances from KMT leadership that a robust defense package would eventually be approved,” a ⁠Democratic congressional aide ‌who had recently traveled to Taiwan said.

The KMT ⁠says it supports defense spending, but will not ​sign “blank ‌checks” and that dialogue with Beijing is equally ​important.

In Taipei, ⁠ruling party lawmakers have expressed anger at the KMT for skipping defense budget talks and for its leader Cheng Li-wun visiting China, where she made a plea for peace, saying birds not missiles should fly in the skies.

(Reporting by David Brunnstrom and Michael Martina; Editing ​by Alison Williams)