Sen. Lindsey Graham Says He Would Support Sending American Troops to Taiwan
The United States should aggressively train Taiwanese forces âso they can fight like Ukrainians,â send F-16 jets to the island, install nuclear-tipped missiles in its submarines, and dispatch American troops to defend the nation, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told Fox News Sunday on April 9.
Graham said that Congress needs to ask itself, ââShould we have a defense agreement with the island of Taiwan?â We donât,â he said. âBut yes, Iâd be very much open to using U.S. forces to defend Taiwan because itâs in our national security interest to do so.â
Graham said he believes the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in Beijing is âsetting the stage possibly for a blockade of Taiwan.â
âThe Communist Chinese party is going to test us dramatically this year and next year before the election,â he said. âIn 1961, the Russians tried to isolate West Berlin. So Iâm fearful that the Chinese may be setting conditions to blockade Taiwan in the coming months or weeks, and we need to respond forcefully if they do that.â
Graham cited Taiwanâs role in producing microchips and the risk of the CCPâwhich is militarizing at a rapid rateâgaining âa monopoly on the digital economyâ as a reason for defending the island.
Taiwan makes more than 60 percent of the worldâs semiconductors and more than 90 percent of the most advanced versions.
Taiwanese sailors salute the islandâs flag on the deck of the Panshih supply ship after taking part in annual drills, at the Tsoying naval base in Kaohsiung on January 31, 2018. (MANDY CHENG/AFP via Getty Images)
Chips compose 15 percent of Taiwanâs GDP, and most semiconductors are produced by one companyâthe Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation.
âWhat would I do to deter blockage Taiwan? I would let the Chinese know that if you blockade Taiwan, youâre gonna have a hard time getting oil from the Mid-East.
âI would increase training and get the F-16s they need in Taiwan,â Graham said. âThereâs a backlog. I would solve that backlog.
âI would move war forces to South Korea and Japan,â Graham added. âI would put nuclear-tipped cruise missiles on all of our submarines all over the world like the Russians did.â
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping feel empowered by the chaotic withdrawal of American forces from Afghanistan in 2021, Graham added.
âTaiwanâs not the problem. Lindsey Grahamâs not the problem. Itâs Putin and itâs Xi,â Graham said.
Graham has consistently supported the U.S. sending military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine in its war effort against Russia.
Last month, he said that Russia should be âheld accountableâ for destroying an American military drone and added that âyour airplaneâ should be shot down if âyou ever get nearâ another American asset flying in international waters.
âWhat would Ronald Reagan do right now?â Graham said. âHe would start shooting Russian planes down if they were threatening our assets.
âAmerican foreign policy is in freefall,â Graham said, adding that âon multiple fronts, weâre in a dangerous situation. Weakness breeds provocation.â
House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) is leading a bipartisan delegation of House members in Taiwan âto discuss ways the U.S. can strengthen our economic and defense relationship with Taiwan in the face of growing threats in the region,â McCaulâs office reported.
At a luncheon in Taipei on April 8, McCaul said that the United States will help Taiwan with armed forces training and accelerate deliveries of self-defense weapons.
McCaul pointed out that he signed off on â22 weapon systems over three years agoâ and they âhave yet to get into Taiwan.â
âI signed off on those deliveries, and we are doing everything in our power to expedite this,â McCaul said. âPeace through strength is real, and thatâs why we need to harden Taiwan.â
In a potential confrontation with the CCP, McCaul said, Taiwanâs defense abilities are ânot where they need to be.â
âIf weâre going to have deterrence for peace, we need to get these weapons into Taiwan,â McCaul added.
Under a âone Chinaâ policy, the United States acknowledges Beijingâs position that Taiwan is part of China. The United States does not formally recognize Taiwan as a country on paper but maintains relations with the island of around 24 million citizens that has its own government, currency, and military.
âStrategic ambiguity is not working,â Graham told Fox News Sunday. âChina, after Afghanistan, believes that the store is open, that you can go in and take whatever you want on Bidenâs watch.â
âI believe in a âone Chinaâ policy, but I would be willing to fight for Taiwan because Taiwan is a democracy. We stood with them for decades,â Graham continued.
âSo I would up our game, and if you donât up your game now, you are going to have a war.â