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Taiwan must heed calls to share responsibility for ‘collective defence’, president says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 17, 2026 | 12:55 AM

By Ann Wang

TAICHUNG, Taiwan, July 17 (Reuters) – Taiwan must heed international calls to share the responsibility for “collective defence”, President Lai Ching-te said on Friday, appealing for parliamentary support for new spending on ​drones.

While Taiwan’s government has prioritised drones and other asymmetric systems, ‌in May the opposition-dominated parliament passed only two-thirds of the T$1.25 trillion ($38.69 billion) in extra defence spending Lai had asked for, earmarking funds only for U.S. arms.

The government has now proposed a new, T$210 billion package for surveillance, coastal attack and small ‌surface ​drones to the end of 2031. Taiwan’s opposition ⁠parties are pushing their own ⁠drone spending plans.

Speaking to reporters during a visit to government arms contractor the National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology in the central city of Taichung, Lai said Chinese pressure on Taiwan has become ​increasingly intense.

“To demonstrate our determination to safeguard the nation, maintain stability across the Taiwan Strait, and uphold peace in the Indo-Pacific, we must ⁠respond to the international call to share ⁠the responsibility of collective defence,” he said.

China views democratically-governed Taiwan ​as its own territory and has never renounced the use of force ​to bring the island under its control. Lai and his government ‌reject Beijing’s sovereignty claims.

Lai said that looking at the Ukraine-Russia conflict and the fighting between the United States and Iran, drones have become the “most important assets on the battlefield”.

Lai said he hoped parliament would support drone spending ⁠plans.

“I also call on both the ruling and opposition parties to jointly support national security and industrial development, in order to respond to the international ⁠community’s expectations regarding Taiwan’s ‌determination to safeguard its security,” he said.

The United States, ⁠Taiwan’s most important arms supplier and international backer, has ​strongly ‌backed the government’s plans to boost defence spending, especially ​on drones.

Earlier ⁠this month, the top U.S. diplomat in Taiwan said Taiwan needs a “hornet’s nest” of drones to help deter conflict and provide security.

The Trump administration has called on U.S. allies to spend more on their militaries, something Lai has strongly embraced.

($1 = 32.3110 Taiwan dollars)

(Reporting by Ann Wang; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing ​by Jamie Freed)