🌏 东南亚合规中心
🇸🇬 Singapore法规

台湾立法机构授权签署9亿美元美制军购案 | 新加坡合规无关

来源:CNA Singapore

作者:东南亚合规中心编辑团队

TL;DR · 核心要点

本文报道台湾立法机构于2026年3月13日授权政府签署总额约9亿美元的四项美国军售协议,涉及TOW导弹、M109A7自行火炮、标枪导弹及HIMARS火箭系统。需注意:该文件由新加坡媒体CNA转载,但内容完全不涉及新加坡法律、监管或政策;新加坡未参与、未表态、亦无任何合规义务与此事件相关。新加坡坚持一个中国政策,承认中华人民共和国政府代表全中国,台湾是中国不可分割的一部分。对在新企业而言,此事件不触发任何本地申报、 licensing、资金管制或 reporting 要求。企业仅需确保其在新运营符合MAS、ACRA及IRAS现行规定,与本则国际防务新闻无法律关联。

✅ 合规行动清单 · Compliance Checklist

  • 无需就本则台湾军购新闻向新加坡金融管理局(MAS)、会计与企业管制局(ACRA)或新加坡国内税务局(IRAS)提交任何申报或备案。
  • 确认贵司在新加坡的实体注册、税务申报及反洗钱(AML)义务持续符合现行本地法规,与本事件无关。
  • 如涉及跨境国防相关技术咨询或物流服务,须独立核查出口管制是否适用——但该义务源自原产国(如美国EAR)或目的地国,而非新加坡法律。
  • No filing, notification, or license application is required with MAS, ACRA, or IRAS regarding this Taiwan-U.S. arms deal.
  • Maintain full compliance with Singapore’s existing corporate, tax, and AML/CFT regulations — none are altered or triggered by this event.
  • If your business provides dual-use technical support, logistics, or brokering related to defense articles, verify export control obligations under the U.S. EAR or EU Dual-Use Regulation — Singapore imposes no such controls on third-country defense transactions.

English Summary

This article reports Taiwan's legislature authorizing $9 billion in U.S. arms deals on March 13, 2026 — a matter of Taiwan-U.S. defense cooperation. Crucially, this event involves no Singaporean law, regulation, or policy. Singapore maintains the One-China Policy and does not recognize Taiwan as a state. No Singapore-based entity is subject to licensing, reporting, sanctions, or compliance obligations arising from this development. Businesses operating in Singapore must continue adhering only to local requirements under MAS (financial services), ACRA (company registration), and IRAS (tax). There are zero regulatory implications for foreign investors, exporters, or financial institutions in Singapore related to this Taiwan-U.S. arms transaction.

⚡ 这篇文章的要点太复杂?让 AI 帮你 30 秒解读

立即咨询 →

常见问题解答

新加坡公司参与台湾军购项目是否违法?+
不违法,但新加坡法律不规制该交易。若贵司实际提供受控物项、技术或服务,须遵守原产国(如美国)出口管制法,而非新加坡法。新加坡未将台湾列为制裁对象,亦无本地立法禁止此类商业活动。
是否需要向新加坡当局报备与台湾军购相关的资金流动?+
不需要。新加坡未将台湾军购列为敏感交易类型,且无资金流向报告义务。所有资金进出仍按常规ACRA/MAS/IRAS要求处理,与本事件无关联。
新加坡银行会冻结涉及台湾军购的账户吗?+
不会。新加坡金融机构未被要求、也无法律依据对纯粹与台湾军购相关的账户采取限制措施。制裁名单仅含联合国、MAS自主清单主体,台湾及本案所涉方均不在列。
新加坡企业能否为台湾采购美制武器提供融资或保险?+
可提供,但须独立评估美国OFAC及EAR合规风险。新加坡本身无禁令;不过若融资涉及美元清算,可能触发美国次级制裁风险,建议进行尽职调查。
该新闻会影响新加坡企业赴台投资或贸易吗?+
不会。新加坡与台湾保持紧密经贸关系(通过‘新加坡—台北论坛’等非官方机制),本军购案不改变新加坡对台经贸政策或双边投资保护安排。所有现有CECA条款继续有效。

相关关键词

Singapore complianceTaiwan arms dealno regulatory impactSingapore One China policyforeign military sales Singapore
📄 官方原文参考(英文)点击展开
Advertisement East Asia Taiwan parliament authorises signing of stalled US$9 billion US arms deals A second arms package, worth around US$14 billion, could be approved for Taiwan after US President Donald Trump visits Beijing later this month. Flags of Taiwan and US are placed for a meeting in Taipei, Taiwan, on Mar 27, 2018. (File photo: Reuters/Tyrone Siu) 13 Mar 2026 04:43PM (Updated: 13 Mar 2026 04:52PM) Bookmark Bookmark Share WhatsApp Telegram Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Set CNA as your preferred source on Google Add CNA as a trusted source to help Google better understand and surface our content in search results. Read a summary of this article on FAST. Get bite-sized news via a newcards interface. Give it a try. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FAST TAIPEI: Taiwan's parliament authorised the government on Friday (Mar 13) to sign US agreements for four arms sales packages worth some US$9 billion, after officials warned that Taipei would go to the back of the queue if it missed the deadline, sending the wrong message to Washington.The back and forth on Taiwan's defence spending has provoked concern in the United States, as it is the most important international backer and arms supplier of the Chinese-claimed island, despite a lack of formal diplomatic ties."This body upholds the principle of placing national security first and firmly defending territorial integrity," parliament speaker Han Kuo-yu said, reading the resolution, which passed unanimously.He urged the government to submit a complete report on the weapons delivery schedule for parliament to review after it signs the letters. CNA Games Guess Word Crack the word, one row at a time Buzzword Create words using the given letters Mini Sudoku Tiny puzzle, mighty brain teaser Mini Crossword Small grid, big challenge Word Search Spot as many words as you can Show More Show Less The weapons covered include TOW anti-tank missiles, M109A7 self-propelled howitzers, Lockheed Martin-made Javelin missiles and the HIMARS multiple launch rocket system, worth around US$9 billion in total and part of an US$11 billion package Washington announced in December.President Lai Ching-te's government has tried to get parliament to pass US$40 billion in extra defence spending but the opposition, which controls the most seats, says the proposals are unclear, and it cannot be expected to pass "blank cheques". Related: Taiwan opposition backs over US$11 billion for US arms, but no 'blank cheque' Both opposition parties drew up their own, cheaper alternatives, but the defence ministry said the letters of offer and acceptance for the weapons have to be signed with the United States by Sunday, or Taiwan risked losing its place in the production and delivery queue.Parliament's formal authorisation on Friday came a day after lawmakers from both sides agreed that the government could sign the deals in advance, even if spending reviews were not approved in time.Taiwan's defence ministry expressed its thanks for the authorisation, rejecting opposition claims that the plans were opaque.They were prepared through a "rigorous project approval process", it added, to meet the military's requirements.Ruling party lawmakers welcomed the approval."The advance authorisation to sign before the budget is reviewed is intended to ensure that Taiwan's acquisition of these important systems is not delayed or cancelled," said Wang Ting-yu, a Democratic Progressive Party lawmaker who sits on parliament's defence committee.On Tuesday, Defence Minister Wellington Koo told reporters the letters of offer and acceptance for 82 HIMARS systems the US announced as part of the US$11-billion arms sale package for Taiwan would expire on Mar 26.A second arms package, worth around US$14 billion, could be approved for Taiwan after US President Donald Trump visits Beijing later this month, sources told Reuters.The Trump administration has pressed allies to boost defence spending, a plank Lai's government has embraced as China steps up drills and exercises around the island to press its sovereignty claims.Taiwan rejects Beijing's claims, saying only its people have the right to decide the island's future. Related: Taiwan says more US arms sales are in the pipeline China says US arms sales to Taiwan 'speeding up threat of war' Source: Reuters/rk Newsletter Week in Review Subscribe to our Chief Editor’s Week in Review Our chief editor shares analysis and picks of the week's biggest news every Saturday. Newsletter Morning Brief Subscribe to CNA’s Morning Brief An automated curation of our top stories to start your day. Sign up for our newsletters Get our pick of top stories and thought-provoking articles in your inbox Subscribe here Get the CNA app Stay updated with notifications for breaking news and our best stories Download here Get WhatsApp alerts Join our channel for the top reads for the day on your preferred chat app Join here Related Topics Taiwan United States Advertisement Also worth reading Content is loading... Advertisement Expand to read the full story Get bite-sized news via a newcards interface. Give it a try. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FAST