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Lesson 13 min 20 XP

The Military Balance Across the Taiwan Strait

How China's military modernization has shifted the cross-strait balance and what it means for deterrence.

A Shifting Balance

For decades, the Taiwan Strait — 130 kilometers of open water — plus US military backing provided Taiwan with a comfortable security buffer. That buffer has eroded dramatically. China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) has undergone a massive modernization program, building the world's largest navy by number of vessels, deploying advanced anti-ship missiles (the 'carrier killer' DF-21D and DF-26), and conducting increasingly aggressive exercises around Taiwan.

Taiwan's military, by contrast, faces recruitment challenges, aging equipment, and a defense budget that, while increasing, remains a fraction of China's. Taiwan has been shifting toward an 'asymmetric defense' strategy — investing in mobile anti-ship missiles, sea mines, and small, survivable platforms rather than trying to match China's conventional forces.