Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Taiwan Defense”
The Invasion Scenario: How the PLA Plans to Cross 110 Miles of Water
The People’s Liberation Army has been studying the problem of amphibious assault on Taiwan for longer than most of its current officer corps has been alive. The scenario has driven force development decisions, procurement priorities, and joint operations doctrine across three decades of modernization. What the PLA has built is not a military designed to fight a generic adversary in generic conditions. It is a military designed, among other things, to cross 110 miles of water against a prepared defender while managing American intervention. Understanding what that military looks like is the starting point for any serious assessment of Taiwan Strait risk.
The Porcupine Strategy: Taiwan's Shift Toward Asymmetric Defense
Taiwan’s defense establishment has been conducting an argument with itself for most of the past decade about what kind of military it needs. On one side: advocates of conventional deterrence, who want advanced fighter aircraft, large surface combatants, and the visible symbols of military capability that signal to Beijing that Taiwan can fight and to Washington that Taiwan is a serious defense partner. On the other side: advocates of asymmetric or “porcupine” defense, who argue that Taiwan cannot match PLA conventional capability in a symmetric competition and that investing in high-cost platforms that the PLA can destroy on the ground before they are ever used is strategically incoherent.