Tuesday, December 02, 2025

Taiwan Bets $40 Billion On ‘Israeli-Style’ Iron Dome Air Defence Shield; Know All About Taiwan’s T-Dome



Monday, December 1, 2025


Taiwan Bets $40 Billion On ‘Israeli-Style’ Iron Dome Air Defence Shield; Know All About Taiwan’s T-Dome


By AFP NEWS
-November 30, 2025


Taiwan has unveiled plans for an additional $40 billion in defence spending over the coming years, the centrepiece of which is an ambitious, Israeli-inspired multi-layered air defence network — “T-Dome”.

Designed to shield the island from swarms of Chinese fighter jets, ballistic and cruise missiles, and unmanned drones, T-Dome aims to create an impenetrable protective dome over Taiwan’s skies.

Beijing continues to insist that Taiwan is an inseparable part of the People’s Republic and has repeatedly vowed to bring the island under its control, by force if necessary.

President Lai Ching-te has made the rapid deployment of T-Dome a top priority, describing it as an essential “safety net” for Taiwan’s 23 million people amid what he calls China’s increasingly aggressive military posture toward the island and the wider Indo-Pacific region.


What is Taiwan’s T-Dome

The T-Dome was announced by Lai on October 10 and has drawn comparisons with Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system.

But there are key differences.

While the Iron Dome is designed mainly for short-range weapons, the T-Dome will face a “much wider array of threats”, Taipei-based security analyst J. Michael Cole said.

“This is aimed at PLA aircraft, ballistic and cruise missiles, as well as, increasingly, drones,” said Cole, using the acronym for China’s People’s Liberation Army.

Taiwan already has air defence systems, including the US-built Patriot and the domestically made Sky Bow systems.

And it is awaiting the delivery of National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System fire units from the United States.

The T-Dome will integrate these with radars, sensors, and other advanced technology to provide what Lai describes as “high-level detection and effective interception”.

“If you do not integrate these detection devices, then those air-defence missiles, whether for counter-fire, counter-attack or counter-drone purposes, can’t achieve efficient interception or effective fire coordination and allocation,” Defence Minister Wellington Koo has said.

The T-Dome will have two major components, said Su Tzu-yun, a military expert at Taipei’s Institute for National Defense and Security Research.

It will have a command and control system that “collects radar data, identifies threats, decides which interceptor should fire, and coordinates all units, so they react within seconds,” Su said.

The other part will be the “interceptor layer” — the weapons used to “shoot down incoming threats” at different altitudes.


(FILES) An Air Force Patriot missile system is deployed at a park in Taipei on July 11, 2025 on the fourth day of the Han Kuang military exercise. Taiwan’s government has proposed 40 billion USD in extra defence spending over several years, with the focus on developing a multi-layered air defence system dubbed “T-Dome”. (Photo by I-Hwa Cheng / AFP)


Why Does Taiwan Need It?

Taiwan has learned vital lessons from Ukraine on the importance of having air defence systems that can protect combat forces, critical infrastructure, and civilian buildings.

While Taiwan has been upgrading its military over the past decade and has spent billions of dollars on US arms, it would be outgunned in a conflict with China.

Having the ability to “neutralise” a sudden Chinese missile strike would help deter Beijing from attacking, Su said.

Su said Chinese warships routinely deployed near Taiwan are capable of firing hundreds of missiles at Taiwan’s airports, radar sites, and military bases “within three minutes”.

That does not include the hundreds of land-based missiles China has.

“This is why Taiwan needs an integrated air defence system capable of responding to these emerging challenges,” Su said.


When Will It Be Ready?

That depends on a range of factors, including when the United States can deliver the weapons and technology needed.

Taiwan is already waiting for billions of dollars’ worth of US arms.

The defence ministry has published a list of items it plans to procure with the new budget, including precision artillery, long-range precision-strike missiles, anti-ballistic and anti-armour missiles, and unmanned systems.

The opposition-controlled parliament has not yet approved the budget and it is not clear what Taiwan plans to buy from the United States, but Lai said there would be “significant” US arms acquisitions.

Lai said Wednesday that Taiwan’s military aims to have a “high level” of joint combat readiness by 2027 — which US officials have previously cited as a possible timeline for a Chinese attack on the island — and “highly resilient and comprehensive deterrent defence capabilities by 2033”.

“Completing the entire T-Dome architecture before 2027 is impossible,” said Su.

“System integration and the production of new interceptors — missiles, anti-aircraft guns, and directed-energy weapons — will all take time.”

Readiness does not only depend on deliveries, said Drew Thompson, a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University.

“It really comes down to how you define effectiveness, how you define readiness, and what’s included in T-Dome,” Thompson said.

“Are they counting war reserve munitions? Do they have enough missiles in storage? Are they distributed?”

And it also requires the military to “learning how to operate” the systems.


By Agence France-Presse
Edited by ET Online Desk


19 comments:

  1. Very Good News Indeed.

    Next on the shopping cart must be Isaac's Iron Beam Laser Air Defense, to shoot down the thousands of Eastern Bully drones at a few NT dollar per shot.

    https://youtu.be/yayPswFgs8M?si=FlsLvJ8fo5GDWUZF

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wakakaka… unproven iron bean of syiok-sendiri fart!

      Can't even provide humongous amount of field electricity to supply bean pose to the claims attack range.

      Truly zionist gullible gullie

      Delete
    2. It will be a waste of money, check what happened when Iran rain 1000 missles on Israeĺ non-stop recently..

      Should just save it and use it to upgrade the country old infrastructures to benefit the citizen. Nobody will dare to invade Taiwan when it is re-unified with the mainland.

      Delete
  2. It is so hypocritical for Eastern Bully to lay claim for Taiwan because of "historical reasons" and at the same time rejek Isaac's claim for Judea and Samaria for the same reason.

    Put pseudo "embassy" in Ramallah with "Director" in charge, but at the same time get angry and throw tantrums when other countries do the same in Taipei.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. both republican and communist China's originally agreed both were one nation. Today after CCp has grown so powerful, republican China changes her mind and now wants to be a different nation, wakakaka. But has shailoks the same situation? apart from stealing Palestinians' land in the first place

      Delete
    2. Who Stole Whose Land?

      Did the Arabs Steal Palestine? Let's check the Receipts

      https://youtu.be/wVL55wyatuA?si=-Ug1JBDMPCI4bMb_

      Delete
    3. What zionist his-storical fsrt? This zionist arselicker is just using zionist grandmother's fairytale to justify their land grabbing.

      Delete
  3. LET’S GO !!!!!!

    🇮🇱 IRON BEAM GOES LIVE: ISRAEL TO DEPLOY FRICKIN' LASERS

    After a decade of development, Israel's Iron Beam laser defense system is officially combat-ready.

    The IDF will receive the high-powered system on December 30, following successful tests and limited use against Hezbollah drones.

    Defense officials say it will “fundamentally change the rules of engagement” - with lasers that literally shoot threats out of the sky.

    Next-gen versions are already in the works.

    Source: Times of Israel

    https://x.com/marionawfal/status/1995465401296159115?s=46

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wakakakaka…

      Source: Times of Israel

      Says it all, just for zionist gullible gullies

      Delete
  4. Eastern Bully is better off leaving Taiwan (kakilang) alone. Both of you can prosper together.

    The real lebensraum is up north, reclaiming 1,000,000 sq km from Russia, annexed in 1858 and 1869 (one-sided Treaties of Aigun and Peking) which kicked off the Century of Humiliation.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Aigun#:~:text=The%20Russian%20general%20Muraviev%20and,Ussuri%20region%20to%20the%20Russians.

    Russia is today very weak, exhausted and unable to kill off even Ukraine. Guangdong’s GDP alone can match the whole of Russia. Russia’s economy is wasted due to the war and sanctions.

    Eastern Bully must strike now.

    "Russia's integration into China has begun": Putin allowed Chinese citizens to enter without visas

    "Siberia and the Far East are screwed," "The beginning of Chinese expansion has been laid. Great China from the Pacific Ocean to the Urals," "They have closely aligned with China," "We already work for them anyway," – this is how Russians reacted online to Putin's signed decree on visa-free entry for Chinese citizens.

    The document was signed on December 1, comes into effect the same day, and will be valid until September 14, 2026. Citizens of the PRC will have the right to enter and stay in Russia for no more than 30 days.

    Next - Heard of Haishenwai?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. With reunification Taiwan will prosper better. Taiwan really developed only during Chiang Kai S. one party system. Its growth become stagnant when Taiwan turn into a democratic country with multi parties

      Delete
    2. Mfer, it's 海参崴!

      Delete
  5. Taiwan is peanuts. Forget it. They are in Chinese hands already. Kakilang. Don’t be like Arabs, always fighting each other.

    1,000,000 sq km beckons up north. And Haishenwai is just across the Sea from……Yapan.

    Haishenwai is the traditional Chinese name for the Russian city of Vladivostok, which translates to "sea-cucumber bay". The area was once part of China's Qing Dynasty but was ceded to the Russian Empire in 1860 through an "unequal treaty". The name and historical context of Haishenwai have become a point of contention, particularly among some Chinese nationalists who have called for the return of the territory.

    Historical origin: The name "Haishenwai" was used for the area before it was ceded to Russia.

    Modern name: Today, the city is officially known as Vladivostok, meaning "Ruler of the East" in Russian.

    Geopolitical significance: The historical cession of this territory has become a subject of renewed interest and nationalistic sentiment in China, especially concerning its proximity to the border and its role in Russia's Pacific Fleet.

    Contested history: The term "unequal treaty" refers to the Convention of Peking of 1860, which transferred the land from China to the Russian Empire.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. mfer, the best analogical fart is for u to think about what ur forebears amoy land isn't been returned to u!

      Yr forebear abandoned it while chasing for their demoNcratic wet dream.

      So, how?

      Cry father-mother to beg CCP to return to u?

      Better DON'T wake up, mfer.

      Delete
  6. China just declared the San Francisco Peace Treaty “illegal and invalid.”
    But here’s the catch: the moment China rejects SFPT, the entire post-WWII map of Asia breaks — and China is the first country to lose territory.

    Why?
    Because SFPT isn’t just a US–Japan treaty.
    It’s the document Japan used to renounce the territories it seized from China.

    If SFPT is invalid, then every renunciation inside it is also invalid:

    • Manchuria — Japan’s renunciation disappears
    • Taiwan (Formosa) — status becomes “undetermined territory” again
    • Penghu (Pescadores) — no legal transfer
    • Spratlys & Paracels — Japan’s renunciation vanishes
    • China loses the legal foundation of its South China Sea claim
    • China can no longer argue “post-war order” against Japan
    • ROC vs PRC succession problem reopens
    • The 1945–1951 borders collapse into pre-war chaos

    In other words:
    SFPT is the only treaty that formalised Japan giving these territories up.
    Reject the treaty, and you reject the surrender.

    It’s geopolitical self-sabotage:
    A move meant to weaken Japan actually weakens China’s own claims first.

    And the irony?
    China was excluded from SFPT in 1951 — but without it, China loses:
    • its claim logic over Taiwan,
    • its claim logic in the South China Sea,
    • its ability to use “post-war order” as a diplomatic weapon,
    • and even the legal closure over Manchuria.

    Declaring SFPT invalid doesn’t rewrite history.
    It only rewrites the map — in ways that hurt China more than anyone else.

    https://x.com/TGTM_Official/status/1995716991207047307?s=20

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mfer, read the REAL history lah.

      The key theme of San Francisco Peace Treaty was orchestrated by the Yank.

      The treaty was negotiated during the Cold War, with the U.S. aiming to make Japan a bulwark against communism in Asia.

      So, what about those countries who hadn't recognized that f*cked piece of yankee shit?

      Japan's fate after WWII was sealed by the The Cairo Declaration (1943) & the Potsdam Proclamation in July 1945.

      SFPT was just a wallflower to upstage the yankee's Asian aim of dominance!

      Delete
  7. Siberia is full of mineral riches that China covers.
    It's a matter of time before CCP python swallow the Russian pig.
    And there is nothing Russian pig can do to stop CCP unless Russia goes Nuke.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Siberia natural resources r well documented by the Chinese long before the Czar Russia came into power. Yet China has NEVERforcefully wrestling that land from Russia. Instead, it was the other way round, mfer.

      Know ur his-story of fart lah!

      Delete