Taiwan conducted an important military exercise this week with HIMARS rocket systems supplied by the United States, sending a clear message about its determination to defend itself against the growing threats from China. The maneuvers, carried out on the western coast of the island and oriented towards the Taiwan Strait, marked the first occasion that these advanced mobile rocket launchers fired projectiles into the waters separating the island from mainland China.
The exercise took place in an increasingly tense context between Taipei and Beijing, following years of military pressure, air incursions, and naval deployments by the Chinese regime around the democratic island. Taiwanese authorities indicated that the drills aimed to improve response capability in the event of an invasion and strengthen rapid deployment and precision strike tactics.
The HIMARS (High Mobility Artillery Rocket System) systems were the central element of the maneuvers. These truck-mounted launchers are designed to execute quick strikes and then immediately change position to avoid enemy retaliation, a tactic known as ''shoot-and-scoot.'' The system's mobility was demonstrated when the units received the firing order, positioned themselves, and launched their rockets in just three minutes.

Taiwanese Army Sergeant Wang Ming-hui stated that the armed forces will continue training with these systems ''with an unwavering determination to protect Taiwan.'' Although the projectiles used were training versions with reduced range, the symbolism of the exercise was evident: the island is actively reinforcing its defensive capabilities in the face of a threat it considers increasingly real.
Taiwan's decision to invest in highly mobile weaponry is part of an asymmetrical strategy driven in collaboration with the United States. Instead of trying to compete directly with China's enormous military power through costly conventional systems, Taipei seeks to develop capabilities that complicate and increase the cost of any invasion attempt by Beijing.
Taiwan's representative in Washington, Alexander Yui, downplayed the direction of the shots by pointing out that, due to the island's geography, options were limited. ''We are an island; we can only shoot east or west, so they chose the west,'' he explained. However, the exercise was interpreted by numerous observers as a demonstration of military readiness in the face of constant threats from across the strait.










