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One China
Traditional Chinese一個中國
Simplified Chinese一个中国
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYīgè Zhōngguó
Wade–GilesI-ko Chungkuo
IPA[ǐkɤ ʈʂʊ́ŋkwǒ]
One China principle
Traditional Chinese一個中國原則
Simplified Chinese一个中国原则
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYīgè Zhōngguó yuánzé
Wade–GilesI-ko Chungkuo yüantse
IPA[ǐkɤ ʈʂʊ́ŋkwǒ yǎntsɤ̌]
One China with respective interpretations
Traditional Chinese一個中國各自表述
Simplified Chinese一个中国各自表述
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYīgè Zhōngguó gèzì biǎoshù
One China policy
Traditional Chinese一個中國政策
Simplified Chinese一个中国政策
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYīgè Zhōngguó zhèngcè
Wade–GilesI-ko Chungkuo Chengts'e
IPA[ǐkɤ ʈʂʊ́ŋkwǒ ʈʂə̂ŋtsʰɤ̂]

One China is a phrase with variant meanings, adopted by many states and other actors to describe their stance on the relationship between the People's Republic of China (PRC) based on mainland China, and the Republic of China (ROC) based on the Taiwan Area. "One China" asserts that there is only one de jure Chinese nation, despite the de facto division between the two rival governments in the aftermath of the Chinese Civil War. The term may refer, in alphabetical order, to one of the following:

  • The One China policy refers to a United States policy of strategic ambiguity regarding Taiwan.[1] In a 1972 joint communiqué with the PRC, the United States "acknowledges that all Chinese on either side of the Taiwan Strait maintain there is but one China and that Taiwan is a part of China" and "does not challenge that position."[2] It reaffirms the U.S. interest in a peaceful settlement of the Taiwan question.[3] The United States has formal relations with the PRC, recognizes the PRC as the sole legal government of China, and simultaneously maintains its unofficial relations with Taiwan while taking no official position on Taiwanese sovereignty.[4][5][6] The US "acknowledges" but does not "endorse" the PRC's position over Taiwan,[7][8] and has considered Taiwan's political status as "undetermined".[9]
    • Internationally, it may also refer to the stance of numerous other countries, some of which precede and may have influenced the US formulation. For instance, "Australia's 1972 Joint Communiqué with the PRC recognised the Government of the PRC as China's sole legal government, and acknowledged the position of the PRC that Taiwan was a province of the PRC",[10] but "neither supports nor opposes the PRC position" on the matter.[11] While some countries, such as the UK, Canada, Australia, and Japan, like the U.S. acknowledge but do not recognise the PRC's claim, the communiqués of some others, including Israel, Panama, and the Gambia, concur with the PRC's interpretation.[12]
  • The One China principle is the position held by the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that there is only one sovereign state under the name China, with the PRC replacing the ROC[13] and serving as the sole legitimate government of that China, and Taiwan is an inalienable part of China.[14][12] It is opposed to the idea that there are two states holding the name "China", the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Republic of China (ROC); as well as the idea that China and Taiwan form two separate countries.[15]
  • One China with respective interpretations refers to the interpretation of the so-called 1992 Consensus asserted by the ROC's then-governing political party Kuomintang (KMT) that both the PRC and ROC had agreed that there is one "China", but disagreed on whether "China" is represented by the PRC or ROC.[16][17] This interpretation of the 1992 Consensus has not been accepted by the PRC.[18][19] The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), the other major party of the ROC politics, has never acknowledged the existence of the 1992 Consensus and also rejected any claim that both sides of the Taiwan Strait are part of "one China".[20] Lee Teng-hui, the President of the ROC from the KMT at the time, said no consensus had been reached in 1992 and claims to the contrary were "nonsense", and that the term was "something that former Mainland Affairs Council minister Su Chi (蘇起) fabricated to placate the KMT in 2000s", which Su conceded in 2006.[21]

After the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) defeated the Kuomintang (KMT) in the Chinese Civil War and the subsequent retreat of the ROC to Taiwan, the CCP established the PRC in mainland China while the ROC ruled over Taiwan and several outlying islands. During this time, both governments continued to claim legitimacy as the government of all of China. The KMT legally designated the Chinese Communist Party as a "rebellious group".[22] Initially, international recognition of the two was split, but most countries began to recognize the PRC over the ROC in the 70s, including the United States in 1979. The language in the United States' One China policy first arose in its joint 1972 Communiqué with the PRC.

Under ROC President Lee Teng-hui in the 1990s, the Additional Articles of the Constitution of the Republic of China were passed which effectively transformed Taiwan from a one-party state into a democracy, and limited civil and political rights to citizens in the "free area" (the area under its de facto control, consisting of the island groups of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, Matsu and some minor islands), but did not alter language regarding territorial claims or national territory.[23]

Although the 1991 constitutional amendments localized governance to the "free area," the 1947 Constitution still claims all of China as ROC territory, aligning with the Kuomintang's (KMT) original "One China" stance.[24] The Constitution defines ROC territory as encompassing all of China, based on its "existing national boundaries" at the time of adoption (Article 4), asserting the ROC as the legitimate government of the entirety of China, not solely Taiwan. This constitutional stance supports the KMT's historical vision, creating a legal-political disconnect under Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) governance. Despite the DPP's political dominance, it has not legally amended the Constitution to formally redefine Taiwan as a separate nation or change the national boundaries to exclude the mainland, not least because this could provoke PRC retaliation or even invasion.[25][26][27][28] This deadlock reflects a split along party lines: Pan-Blue coalition parties (including the Kuomintang) adhere to "One China with respective interpretations", while Pan-Green coalition parties (including the Democratic Progressive Party) reject it. Meanwhile, the PRC has maintained its One China principle.[29]

Background

[edit]
Territory controlled by the People's Republic of China (purple) and the Republic of China (orange). The size of minor islands has been exaggerated in this map for ease of identification.

The Dutch established a colony on Taiwan in 1624 based in present-day Tainan. Shortly after, the Spanish established a colony in Northern Taiwan in 1626, but were driven out by the Dutch in 1642. It was during this time that large-scale Chinese migration from nearby Fujian Province began.[30][31] The Dutch colony was later conquered by Zheng Chenggong (Koxinga), a Ming-loyalist, in 1662 as the Kingdom of Tungning, before being incorporated by the Qing dynasty in 1683 as part of Fujian Province. In 1887, it was officially made a separate Fujian-Taiwan Province. Taiwan remained a province for eight years until it was ceded to Japan under the Treaty of Shimonoseki in 1895 following the First Sino-Japanese War.

While Taiwan remained under Japanese control, the Qing dynasty was ousted and the First and Second Republic of China (ROC) were established from the Beiyang regime to the Kuomintang (KMT) from 1928. After the conclusion of World War II in 1945, the Republic of China was given control of Taiwan.[32][33][34][35][36][37] In 1949, after losing control of most of mainland China following the Chinese Civil War, and before the post-war peace treaties had come into effect, the ROC government under the KMT withdrew to Taiwan, and Chiang Kai-shek declared martial law.

An argument has been made that Japan formally renounced all territorial rights to Taiwan in 1952 in the San Francisco Peace Treaty, but neither in that treaty nor in the peace treaty signed between Japan and China was the territorial sovereignty of Taiwan awarded to the Republic of China.[38][39] The treaties left the status of Taiwan—as ruled by the ROC or PRC—deliberately vague, and the question of legitimate sovereignty over China is why China was not included in the San Francisco Peace Treaty.[38][39] This argument is not accepted by those who view the sovereignty of Taiwan as having been legitimately returned to the Republic of China at the end of the war.[40] Some argue that the ROC is a government in exile,[41][42][43][44] while others maintain it is a rump state.[45]

The ROC continued to claim itself as the rightful ruler of the entirety of China under the single-party KMT regime, and the PRC made a symmetric claim. In 1971, the United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 replaced the ROC's seat in the United Nations with the PRC. From 30 April 1991, the ROC officially recognized the PRC, thus abandoning the Hallstein Doctrine, while maintaining the claim of an exclusive mandate as the legitimate ruler of China.[46] The ROC transformed into a free and democratic state in the 1990s following decades of martial law with the passage of the Additional Articles of the Constitution of the Republic of China.[47] Afterwards, the legal and political status of Taiwan has become more contentious, with increasing public expressions in favor of Taiwan independence, which were formerly outlawed.

Viewpoints within Taiwan

[edit]

Within Taiwan, there is a distinction between the positions of the Kuomintang (KMT) and the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).

The Kuomintang holds the "One-China principle" and maintains its claim that under the ROC Constitution (passed by the Kuomintang government in 1947 in Nanjing) the ROC has sovereignty over most of China, including, by their interpretation, both mainland China and Taiwan. After the Chinese Communist Party expelled the ROC in the Chinese Civil War from most of Chinese territory in 1949 and founded the PRC, the ROC's Chinese Nationalist government, which still held Taiwan, continued to claim legitimacy as the government of all of China. Under former President Lee Teng-hui, additional articles were appended to the ROC constitution in 1991 so that it applied effectively only to the Taiwan Area.[23] The Kuomintang proclaims a modified form of the "One-China" principle known as the "1992 Consensus". Under this "consensus", both governments "agree" that there is only one single sovereign state encompassing both mainland China and Taiwan, but disagree about which of the two governments is the legitimate government of this state. Former ROC President Ma Ying-jeou had re-asserted claims on mainland China as late as 8 October 2008.[48]

The Democratic Progressive Party rejects the One China principle, and its official position currently is that Taiwan is an independent and sovereign country whose territory consists of Taiwan and its surrounding smaller islands and whose sovereignty derives only from the ROC citizens living in Taiwan (similar to the philosophy of self-determination), based on the 1999 "Resolution on Taiwan's Future". It considers Taiwan as an independent nation under the name of Republic of China, making a formal declaration of independence unnecessary.[49] Though calls for drafting a new constitution and a declaration of a Republic of Taiwan was written into the party charter in 1991,[50] the 1999 resolution has practically superseded the earlier charter.[51]

At least one observer of the Taiwan independence movement believes it runs counter to the PRC's sovereignty claims over Taiwan.[52] A Brookings Institution survey indicates that while Taiwan people overwhelmingly reject unification with the PRC, the vast majority do not support immediate formal independence of a Republic of Taiwan.[53]

Evolution of the One China principle

[edit]
Flag of the Republic of China (right) and People's Republic of China flying together in Chinatown, San Francisco, revealing different political views from overseas Chinese

One interpretation, which was adopted during the Cold War, is that either the PRC or the ROC is the sole rightful government of all China and that the other government is illegitimate. While much of the western bloc maintained relations with the ROC until the 1970s under this policy, much of the eastern bloc maintained relations with the PRC. While the government of the ROC considered itself the remaining holdout of the legitimate government of a country overrun by what it thought of as "Communist bandits", the PRC claimed to have succeeded the ROC in the Chinese Civil War. Though the ROC no longer portrays itself as the sole legitimate government of China, the position of the PRC remained unchanged until the early 2000s, when the PRC began to soften its position on this issue to promote Chinese unification.

One interpretation of one China is that only one geographical region of China exists, which was split between two Chinese governments during the Chinese Civil War. This is largely the position of current supporters of Chinese unification in mainland China, who believe that "one China" should eventually unite under a single government.[54] Starting in 2005, this position has become close enough to the position of the PRC, allowing high-level dialogue between the CCP and the Pan-Blue Coalition of the ROC.[citation needed]

The revised position of the PRC was made clear in the Anti-Secession Law of 2005, which although stating that there is one China whose sovereignty is indivisible, does not explicitly identify this China with the PRC. Almost all PRC laws have a suffix "of the People's Republic of China" (prefix in Chinese grammar) in their official names, but the Anti-Secession Law is an exception. Beijing has made no major statements after 2004 which identify one China with the PRC and has shifted its definition of one China slightly to encompass a concept called the '1992 Consensus': both sides of the Taiwan strait recognize there is only one China—both mainland China and Taiwan belong to the same China but agree to differ on the definition of which China.[54] According to Taiwanese lawyer Chen Chang-wen, the new version changed from a subordinate relationship to an equal relationship, and the legislation only legalized its constitutional obligations.[55] Placing less emphasis on which government should represent One China is more compatible with KMT's position as well as the current ROC Constitution. This reformulation was also reflected in the 2022 PRC white paper on Taiwan.[56]

Policy position in the PRC

[edit]

In practice, official sources and state-owned media never refer to the "ROC government", and seldom to the "government of Taiwan". Instead, the government in Taiwan is referred to as the "Taiwan authorities". The PRC does not accept or stamp Republic of China passports. Instead, a Taiwan resident visiting Mainland China must use a Taiwan Compatriot Entry Permit. Hong Kong grants visa-free entry to holders of a Permit, while holders of a ROC passport must apply for a Pre-arrival Registration. Macau grants visa-free entry to holders of both the permit and the passport.

The United Front, which consists of the eight other political parties in the PRC subordinate to the CCP, has adhered to the One-China policy and opposes Taiwan independence. Among the parties that accepted it are the Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang (a splinter left-wing party that broke away from the main Kuomintang) and the Taiwan Democratic Self-Government League.[29]

In 1950, Premier Zhou Enlai stated that the principle that Taiwan is part of China is "not only a historical fact but affirmed by the Cairo Declaration, the Potsdam Declaration, and the conditions after Japan's surrender."[57]

In its foreign relations, the PRC does not object to other countries having Taiwan trade offices, so long as those countries are not formally engaged in diplomatic activity.[58]: 34 

Policy position in the ROC

[edit]

Chiang Kai-shek held the view that there was One China that should be united under the government of the Republic of China; his adversary Mao praised him for rejecting the idea of 'two Chinas,' stating that Chiang "dared to defy the U.S. policy for 'two Chinas' in front of [John Foster] Dulles, proving that he is still a great nationalist."[59]: 43 

On 1 August 1992, the ROC's National Unification Council passed the "Definition of One China Resolution", stating: "The two sides of the Taiwan Strait uphold the One China principle, but the interpretations of the two sides are different ... Our side believes that one China should mean the Republic of China, established in 1912 and existing today, and its sovereignty extends throughout China, but its current governing authority is only over Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, and Matzu. Admittedly, Taiwan is part of China, but the mainland is also a part of China."[60]: 229  This resolution provided the basis for quasi-governmental talks between the ROC's Strait Exchange Foundation (SEF) and the PRC's Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS).[60]: 229 

During these discussions, SEF stated that "each side expresses its own interpretation verbally in order to solve this sticky problem of [one China] and thereby reaffirmed the August 1st NUC resolution as SEF's interpretation of one China."[60]: 229  ARATS agreed to expressing these interpretations verbally and stated that "both sides of the strait uphold the principle of one China, and actively seek national unification, but the political interpretation of the one China will not be referred to in the cross-strait negotiations on functional issues."[60]: 229–230  This position later became known as the 1992 Consensus, a phrase coined in early 2000 by Su Chi.[60]: 230 

There is significant difference on Taiwan regarding recognition and understanding of the One-China principle. The Pan-Blue Coalition parties, led by the Kuomintang, generally accept the One-China principle. In particular, former president Ma Ying-jeou has stated that "One China is the Republic of China".[61] The Pan-Green Coalition parties, led by the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), do not accept the policy and view Taiwan as a country separate from China. Former DPP president Chen Shui-bian believes the 1992 Consensus forsakes Taiwan's national sovereignty, effectively ceding it to the PRC.[62] President Tsai Ing-wen rejected the 1992 Consensus categorically in 2019.[63]

When the ROC established diplomatic relations with Kiribati in 2003, it did not require that Kiribati sever relations with the PRC.[64] However, the PRC did not accept dual recognition and severed ties with Kiribati as a result.[65] In 2024, the ROC Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that it had no preconditions for maintaining diplomatic relations with other countries, in particular that it was not opposed to simultaneous recognition of the ROC and PRC.[66]

The ROC does not recognize or stamp PRC passports. Instead, mainland Chinese residents visiting Taiwan and other territories under ROC jurisdiction must use an Exit and Entry Permit issued by the ROC authorities.

Other countries' One China policies

[edit]
PRC embassy in Kyiv, Ukraine. Ukraine does not recognize the ROC.
PRC embassy in Canberra, Australia. Australia does not officially recognize the ROC, although it has unofficial relations with it.
ROC embassy in Mbabane, Eswatini. Eswatini does not recognize the PRC.
ROC economic and cultural office in Tokyo, Japan. Japan recognizes the PRC, though it also has informal relations with the ROC.

Not formally recognizing the ROC is a requirement for any political entity to establish diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China, in effect forcing other governments to choose between Beijing and Taipei.[67][68] At times, the PRC has used financial incentives to entice smaller countries to recognize it over the ROC, and both the ROC and PRC have accused each other of dollar diplomacy.[69] Most countries that recognize Beijing circumvent the diplomatic language by establishing trade and cultural missions that represent their interests on Taiwanese soil, while the ROC government represents its interests abroad with reciprocal missions.

The PRC has, in the past, attempted to get nations to recognize that "the Government of the People's Republic of China is the sole legal government of China ... and Taiwan is an inalienable part of the territory of the People's Republic of China." However, many nations are unwilling to make this particular statement and there was often a protracted effort to find language acceptable to both sides, for example that they "respect", "acknowledge", "understand", or "take note of" the PRC's One China principle (but do not say they "recognize" it). This strategic ambiguity in the language used provides the basis for countries to have formal ties with People's Republic of China and maintain unofficial ties to the Republic of China.

Names such as "Chinese Taipei" (e.g. in the Olympics) or "Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, and Matsu" (e.g. in the World Trade Organization) are sometimes used in some international arenas since "Taiwan" suggests that Taiwan is a separate country and "Republic of China" suggests that there are two Chinas, and thus both violate the One-China principle.

United States policy

[edit]
Mao Zedong greets U.S. President Richard Nixon during his visit to China in 1972.

The United States' One-China policy was first stated in the Shanghai Communiqué of 1972: "the United States acknowledges that Chinese on either side of the Taiwan Strait maintain there is but one China and that Taiwan is a part of China.[3] The United States does not challenge that position." The United States has not expressed an explicitly immutable statement regarding whether it believes Taiwan is independent or not. Instead, Washington simply states that they understand the PRC's claims on Taiwan as its own. Nancy Bernkopf Tucker asserts that U.S. One-China policy was not intended to please the PRC government, but as a way for Washington to conduct international relations in the region, which Beijing fails to state.[70] A more recent study suggests that this wording reflected the Nixon administration's desire to shift responsibility for resolving the dispute to the "people most directly involved" – that is, China and Taiwan. At the same time, the United States would avoid "prejudic[ing] the ultimate outcome" by refusing to explicitly support the claims of one side or the other.[71]

At the height of the Sino-Soviet split and Sino-Vietnamese conflict, and at the start of the reform and opening of the PRC, the United States strategically switched diplomatic recognition from the Republic of China (ROC) to the People's Republic of China (PRC) on 1 January 1979 under the administration of Jimmy Carter. Congress quickly responded by passing the Taiwan Relations Act that defined relations with the ROC, but stopped short of full recognition. It also required the United States to provide Taiwan with arms sufficient to maintain its self-defense, but did not commit to defending Taiwan in the event of an invasion.

In 1982, President Ronald Reagan also saw that the Six Assurances were adopted, the fifth being that the United States would not formally recognize Chinese sovereignty over Taiwan. Still, United States policy has remained ambiguous. In the House International Relations Committee on 21 April 2004, the Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, James A. Kelly, was asked by Rep. Grace Napolitano (D-CA) whether the United States government's commitment to Taiwan's democracy conflicted with the so-called One-China policy.[72] He stated "In my testimony, I made the point "our One China," and I didn't really define it, and I'm not sure I very easily could define it. I can tell you what it is not. It is not the One-China policy or the One-China principle that Beijing suggests, and it may not be the definition that some would have in Taiwan. But it does convey a meaning of solidarity of a kind among the people on both sides of the straits that has been our policy for a very long time."[73]

When President Bill Clinton visited Shanghai during his June 1998 visit to China, Clinton articulated the "three nos" for United States foreign policy towards China: (1) not recognizing two Chinas, (2) not supporting Taiwanese independence, and (3) not supporting Taiwanese efforts to join international organizations for which sovereignty is a membership requirement.[74]

U.S. President Barack Obama and Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Obama supported the "One-China" policy during his administration.[75]

The position of the United States, as clarified in the China/Taiwan: Evolution of the "One China" Policy report of the Congressional Research Service (date: 9 July 2007) is summed up in five points:

  1. The United States did not explicitly state the sovereign status of Taiwan in the three US-PRC Joint Communiqués of 1972, 1979, and 1982.
  2. The United States "acknowledged" the "One China" position of both sides of the Taiwan Strait.
  3. U.S. policy has not recognized the PRC's sovereignty over Taiwan;
  4. U.S. policy has not recognized Taiwan as a sovereign country; and
  5. U.S. policy has considered Taiwan's status as unsettled.

These positions remained unchanged in a 2013 report of the Congressional Research Service.[76]

On 2 December 2016, US President-elect Donald Trump and ROC President Tsai Ing-wen conducted a short phone call regarding "the close economic, political and security ties between Taiwan and the US".[77] On 6 December, a few days after the call, Trump said that the US is not necessarily bound by its "one China" policy.[78][79][80] On 9 February 2017, in a lengthy phone call, US President Donald Trump and PRC Paramount leader Xi Jinping discussed numerous topics and President Trump agreed, at the request of Xi Jinping, to honor the "one China" policy.[81]

On 23 May 2022, U.S. President Joe Biden announced the United States would intervene militarily if China were to unilaterally invade Taiwan. Speaking in Japan, President Biden stated, "That’s the commitment we made," an apparent reference to the Taiwan Relations Act, which ensures military support for Taiwan, although the Act does not specifically guarantee direct military action by the United States in Taiwan. President Biden emphasized that Russia's military invasion of Ukraine created an "even stronger" burden to protect Taiwan.[82] China criticized Biden's statement as part of a "hypocritical and futile" pattern of encouragement to "'Taiwan independence' forces."[83] Biden later stated that his remarks did not represent a change from the status quo and the U.S. position of strategic ambiguity.[84] Secretary of State Antony Blinken also delivered a speech in which he stated that U.S. policy regarding the island had not changed, and the State Department updated its fact sheet to reinstate a line stating "we do not support Taiwan independence."[85][86]

Japanese position

[edit]

The 1972 Japan-China Joint Communiqué entered into as the basis of diplomatic normalization in Sino-Japanese relations states that the Government of Japan fully understands and respects the stance of the Government of the People's Republic of China that "Taiwan is an inalienable part of the territory of the People's Republic of China." and that it firmly maintains its stand under Article 8 of the Potsdam Declaration.[87]

Japan has recognized the People's Republic of China "as the sole legal Government of China" since 1975 but has maintained an ambiguous stance regarding the PRC's sovereignty claim over the island of Taiwan.[88]

Russian position

[edit]

In 1949, the Soviet Union recognized the People's Republic of China as the only lawful government of China. The ROC on Taiwan had cancelled the Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship and Alliance treaty in response. The Soviet Union voted to admit the PRC into the UN in 1971.

As with the past leaderships, the Russian government has accepted its support for the One-China policy that Taiwan is "an inalienable part of China, and [the Russian side] opposes any forms of independence", as stated in Article 5 of the 2001 Sino-Russian Treaty of Friendship. This was reaffirmed in January 2022, when Russian and PRC leaders Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping discussed the situation in the prelude to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and again in July 2022, by Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, as United States Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan.[89][90][91]

Philippine policy

[edit]

Similar to other countries, the Philippines maintain a One-China policy.[92] However, despite officially recognizing the People's Republic of China as the sole legitimate government of China since 1975, the country also maintains economic and cultural relations with the Republic of China (or Taiwan).[92][93] Lito Banayo, chair of the Manila Economic and Cultural Office in Taiwan remarked that the country's One-China policy only proscribes the Philippines to enter into political and military agreements with the ROC.[92]

African countries

[edit]

The One China principle is an important factor in China-Africa relations.[58]: 34  In 1971, 26 African countries supported the United Nations General Assembly vote through which the PRC became the sole representative of China.[58]: 34  The sole African country which does not recognize the PRC (and consequently which the PRC maintains no relations with) is Eswatini.[58]: 22  All African countries except Eswatini recognize the People's Republic of China as the sole government of China and Taiwan as an integral part of Chinese territory, and support all efforts by the PRC to "achieve national reunification".[94]

Cross-strait relations

[edit]
A propaganda sign on Dadan (ROC) facing Xiamen (PRC) proclaiming "Three Principles of the People unites China"
A propaganda sign on Mawei (PRC) facing Matsu (ROC) proclaiming "Peaceful reunification, One country, two systems."

The People's Republic of China demands Taiwan acknowledge the One-China principle as a prerequisite to resume any cross-strait dialogue.[95] The PRC offers the chance for open talks and "unobstructed exchanges" with Taiwan as long as it moves to accept the 1992 Consensus.[38] The PRC's One-China policy rejects formulas which call for "two Chinas" or "one China, one Taiwan"[96] and has stated that efforts to divide the sovereignty of China could be met with military force.[97]

The PRC has explicitly stated that it is flexible about the meaning "one China", and that "one China" may not necessarily be synonymous with the PRC, and has offered to talk with parties on Taiwan and the government on Taiwan on the basis of the Consensus of 1992 which states that there is one China, but that there are different interpretations of that one China. For example, in Premier Zhu Rongji's statements prior to the 2000 Presidential Election in Taiwan, he stated that as long as any ruling power in Taiwan accepts the One-China principle, they can negotiate and discuss anything freely.

However, the One-China principle would apparently require that Taiwan formally give up any possibility of Taiwanese independence, and would preclude any "one nation, two states" formula similar to ones used in German Ostpolitik or in Korean reunification. Chen Shui-bian, president of the Republic of China between 2000 and 2008 repeatedly rejected the demands to accept the One-China principle and instead called for talks to discuss One China itself. With the January and March 2008 elections in Taiwan, and the election of Ma Ying-jeou as the President of the ROC, who was inaugurated on 20 May, a new era of better relations between both sides of the Taiwan Strait was established.[98] KMT officials visited mainland China, and the Chinese ARATS met in Beijing with its Taiwanese counterpart, the Straits Exchange Foundation. Direct charter flights were therefore established.

One China was the formulation held by the ROC government before the 1990s, but it was asserted that the one China was the Republic of China rather than PRC. However, in 1991, President Lee Teng-hui indicated that he would not challenge the Communist authorities to rule mainland China. This is a significant point in the history of Cross-Strait relations in that a president of the ROC no longer claims administrative authority over mainland China. Henceforth, the Taiwan independence movement gained a political boost, and under Lee's administration the issue is no longer who rules mainland China, but who claims legitimacy over Taiwan and the surrounding islands. Over the course of the 1990s, President Lee appeared to drift away from the One-China formulation, leading many to believe that he was actually sympathetic to Taiwan independence. In 1999, Lee proposed a special state-to-state relations for mainland China–Taiwan relations which was received angrily by Beijing, which ended semi-official dialogue until June 2008, when ARATS and SEF met, and in which President Ma Ying-jeou reiterated the 1992 Consensus and the different interpretation on "One China".

After the election of Chen Shui-bian in 2000, the policy of the ROC government was to propose negotiations without preconditions. While Chen did not explicitly reject Lee's two states theory, he did not explicitly endorse it either. Throughout 2001, there were unsuccessful attempts to find an acceptable formula for both sides, such as agreeing to "abide by the 1992 consensus". Chen, after assuming the Democratic Progressive Party chairmanship in July 2002, moved to a somewhat less ambiguous policy, and stated in early August 2002 that "it is clear that both sides of the straits are separate countries". This statement was strongly criticized by opposition Pan-Blue Coalition parties on Taiwan, which support a One-China principle, but oppose defining this "One China" as the PRC.

The One-China policy became an issue during the 2004 ROC Presidential election. Chen Shui-bian abandoned his earlier ambiguity and publicly rejected the One-China principle claiming it would imply that Taiwan is part of the PRC. His opponent Lien Chan publicly supported a policy of "one China, different interpretations", as done in 1992. At the end of the 2004 election, Lien Chan and his running mate, James Soong, later announced that they would not put ultimate unification as the goal for their cross-strait policy and would not exclude the possibility of an independent Taiwan in the future. In an interview with Time Asia bureau prior to the 2004 presidential elections, Chen used the model of Germany and the European Union as examples of how countries may come together, and the Soviet Union as illustrating how a country may fragment.

In March 2005, the PRC passed an Anti-Secession Law which authorized the use of force to prevent a "serious incident" that breaks the One-China policy, but which at the same time did not identify one China with the People's Republic and offered to pursue political solutions. At the same session of the PRC Congress, a large increase in military spending was also passed, leading blue team members to interpret those measures as forcing the ROC to adhere to the One-China policy or else the PRC would attack.

In April and May 2005, Lien Chan and James Soong made separate trips to mainland China,[99] during which both explicitly supported the Consensus of 1992 and the concept of one China and in which both explicitly stated their parties' opposition to Taiwan independence. Although President Chen at one point supported the trips of Lien and Soong for defusing cross-strait tensions,[100] he also attacked them for working with the "enemy" PRC[citation needed]. On 28 April 2008, Honorary Chairman Lien Chan of the then opposition Kuomintang visited Beijing and met with Hu Jintao for the fourth time since their historic encounter on 29 April 2005 in their respective capacity as party leaders of both the Chinese Communist Party and the KMT. Lien also met Chen Yunlin, director of the PRC's Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council.[101]

On 28 May 2008, Kuomintang Chairman Wu Po-hsiung made a landmark visit to Beijing,[102] and met and shook hands with the Communist General Secretary Hu Jintao, at the Great Hall of the People. He also visited the mausoleum of Sun Yat-sen. Hu Jintao called for resuming exchanges and talks, based on the 1992 Consensus.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The One China framework encompasses the diplomatic principle and policies asserting the unity of a single sovereign Chinese state, disputed between the People's Republic of China (PRC), which controls mainland China and asserts exclusive sovereignty over Taiwan, and the Republic of China (ROC), which governs Taiwan and maintains its own claim to represent all China despite effective separation since 1949.[1] The PRC's One China principle demands recognition of Taiwan as an integral province under its control, rejecting any independent status for the island, while the ROC's interpretation historically emphasized its legitimacy over the mainland but has evolved toward emphasizing Taiwan's distinct democratic governance and de facto independence.[2][3] This framework originated in key diplomatic documents, notably the 1972 Shanghai Communiqué, in which the United States acknowledged that "all Chinese on either side of the Taiwan Strait maintain there is but one China and that Taiwan is a part of China," without endorsing the PRC's territorial claims.[1] Subsequent U.S. policy, formalized after switching recognition to the PRC in 1979, adopted strategic ambiguity—recognizing the PRC as the sole legal government of China while not specifying Taiwan's future political status and committing to provide defensive arms to the island under the Taiwan Relations Act.[4] Many other nations follow similar policies, maintaining unofficial economic and cultural ties with Taiwan through representative offices, despite formal diplomatic relations with the PRC.[2] As of 2023, the PRC holds diplomatic recognition from over 180 United Nations member states, including a majority of the international community, while the ROC retains formal ties with only 12 small nations, largely due to PRC diplomatic pressure and economic incentives to enforce adherence to its One China principle.[5] This disparity underscores the framework's role in isolating Taiwan diplomatically, even as the island operates as a prosperous, self-governing democracy with a population of over 23 million, advanced semiconductor industry, and robust unofficial international engagement. Controversies persist over the PRC's military coercion, including frequent incursions into Taiwan's air defense zone and threats of forcible unification, contrasted with Taiwan's growing public resistance to absorption and reliance on U.S. security assurances amid rising cross-strait tensions.[2][3] The framework's ambiguity has enabled decades of peace but faces strain from PRC assertiveness and debates over its sustainability in light of Taiwan's evolving identity and global supply chain dependencies.[6]

Historical Origins

Establishment of the Republic of China (1912)

The Xinhai Revolution erupted on October 10, 1911, with the Wuchang Uprising in Hubei province, sparking widespread uprisings against the Qing Dynasty across southern and central China.[7] This revolt, organized by revolutionaries including Sun Yat-sen and his Tongmenghui alliance, culminated in the Qing emperor's abdication on February 12, 1912, ending over two millennia of imperial rule in China.[7] On January 1, 1912, in Nanjing, the provisional government proclaimed the establishment of the Republic of China (ROC), with Sun Yat-sen elected as provisional president, marking Asia's first republican regime.[7] The ROC asserted sovereignty over the territories historically governed by the Qing, encompassing China proper, Manchuria, Mongolia, Tibet, Xinjiang, and Taiwan—despite the latter's cession to Japan in 1895 under the Treaty of Shimonoseki, which revolutionaries viewed as an illegitimate loss of integral Chinese territory.[7] Sun Yat-sen's provisional government grounded its legitimacy in the Three Principles of the People, articulated as nationalism (to foster unity among China's diverse ethnic groups under Han-led sovereignty), democracy (to implement popular sovereignty through elected representation), and people's livelihood (to pursue land reform, state-guided industrialization, and welfare to uplift the populace from poverty).[8] These principles derived from Sun's analysis of Western successes and Chinese failures under monarchy, positing republican institutions as causally essential for national revival, in contrast to the authoritarian centralization that would later characterize the mainland's communist regime.[8] The provisional constitution of 1912 emphasized these ideals, establishing a bicameral legislature and executive accountability, though implementation faltered amid warlord fragmentation following Yuan Shikai's assumption of power in March 1912.[7] The ROC rapidly gained international recognition as China's legitimate government, with major powers including the United States, United Kingdom, and Japan according de facto acknowledgment through diplomatic exchanges and treaty continuations from the Qing era.[7] Representing China at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, the ROC secured Shandong's return in principle (though contested), and China under ROC auspices became an original signatory to the League of Nations Covenant on April 28, 1919, joining as a founding member upon ratification in 1920.[9] This early global acceptance positioned the ROC as the sole sovereign authority over "China," providing the historical continuum for subsequent One China assertions by both its mainland successor claimants and its Taiwan-based continuity government.[7]

Chinese Civil War and Post-1949 Division

The Chinese Civil War, resuming in earnest after World War II in 1946, culminated in the victory of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) forces led by Mao Zedong over the Nationalist Kuomintang (KMT) government under Chiang Kai-shek. By mid-1949, CCP armies had captured major cities including Beijing in January and Nanjing in April, forcing the KMT to abandon the mainland.[10][11] On October 1, 1949, Mao proclaimed the establishment of the People's Republic of China (PRC) in Beijing, asserting control over the vast majority of the Chinese mainland.[12] In response, Chiang Kai-shek relocated the Republic of China (ROC) government to Taiwan on December 7, 1949, evacuating administrative organs, military units, and gold reserves to the island, where the ROC continued to function as a de facto separate entity.[13][14] The war's toll included an estimated 1.8 to 3.5 million civilian deaths from combat, atrocities, and related hardships between 1927 and 1949, alongside heavy military losses on both sides exceeding several million captured or killed.[15][16] Accompanying the KMT retreat, approximately 1 to 2 million people—primarily soldiers, officials, and their families—migrated from the mainland to Taiwan between 1946 and 1950, swelling the island's population and introducing a distinct "mainlander" demographic alongside the native Taiwanese majority.[17][18] This mass exodus, combined with the geographic separation, entrenched de facto territorial division, as the PRC consolidated communist rule on the mainland through land reforms and purges, while the ROC imposed martial law in Taiwan to maintain internal control and prepare for a counteroffensive that never materialized.[10] Both regimes initially upheld a "One China" framework, each denying the other's legitimacy and claiming exclusive sovereignty over all Chinese territory. The PRC viewed the ROC as a rump separatist entity and Taiwan as a renegade province to be reunified by force if necessary, as articulated in early CCP declarations.[19] Conversely, the ROC constitution and official stance under Chiang asserted the mainland as ROC territory under temporary communist usurpation, rejecting PRC sovereignty and prohibiting recognition of the division as permanent.[20] This mutual irredentism precluded formal peace accords or armistice, perpetuating low-level hostilities like offshore bombardments into the 1970s, while separate governance systems evolved: the PRC toward one-party authoritarianism marked by events like the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), and the ROC toward economic liberalization and eventual political reforms.[14][21] The unresolved civil war thus established an empirical reality of partitioned administration without legal or diplomatic closure on sovereignty.[19]

UN Resolution 2758 and International Recognition Shifts

On October 25, 1971, the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution 2758 (XXVI), titled "Restoration of the lawful rights of the People's Republic of China in the United Nations," during its 1976th plenary meeting.[22] The resolution recognized the representatives of the People's Republic of China (PRC) as "the only legitimate representatives of China to the United Nations" and expelled "the representatives of Chiang Kai-shek" from the Republic of China (ROC).[22] It passed by a recorded vote of 76 in favor, 35 against, 17 abstentions, and 3 non-voting.[23] The text of Resolution 2758 focused exclusively on the question of which government should represent "China" in the UN, without referencing Taiwan, its sovereignty, or any territorial claims.[24] The PRC has since framed the resolution as an implicit endorsement of its "One China" principle, including sovereignty over Taiwan, citing it to justify excluding Taiwan from UN participation and pressuring other states to limit ties with the island.[25] However, the resolution's operative paragraphs contain no such provisions, and UN practice has not interpreted it as determining Taiwan's status; for instance, U.S. policy holds that it addresses only representational rights, not sovereignty or future participation options for Taiwan.[24][26] The resolution marked a causal turning point in international recognition, accelerating the shift of diplomatic ties from the ROC to the PRC; prior to 1971, the ROC maintained formal relations with over 70 countries, but dozens switched in the ensuing decade amid PRC diplomatic pressure and economic incentives.[27] Key examples include Japan in 1972 and Canada in 1970 (pre-resolution but emblematic of the trend), with the United States following in 1979.[28] Despite these losses, the ROC preserved de facto governance over Taiwan and retained substantive alliances, such as the U.S.-ROC Mutual Defense Treaty (effective until January 1, 1980), underscoring that formal UN seat transfer did not equate to PRC control over the island.[29] Many states that recognized the PRC subsequently established unofficial economic and cultural channels with Taiwan, bypassing sovereignty implications of the resolution.[24]

Core Concepts and Definitions

PRC's One China Principle

The People's Republic of China (PRC) articulates the One China Principle as the assertion that there exists only one sovereign China in the world, encompassing Taiwan as an inalienable part of its territory, with the PRC government as the sole legitimate representative of all China.[30] This position, formalized following the PRC's establishment on October 1, 1949, rejects any formulation of "two Chinas," "one China, one Taiwan," or Taiwanese independence, viewing such notions as challenges to national unity and territorial integrity.[31] The principle draws on historical references like the 1943 Cairo Declaration, which stated that territories Japan had seized from China, including Taiwan (Formosa) and the Penghu Islands, would be restored to the Republic of China (ROC), a claim the PRC interprets as affirming Taiwan's status within a unified Chinese sovereignty that it succeeded post-1949.[32] In diplomatic practice, the PRC enforces the One China Principle as a prerequisite for establishing formal relations, requiring states to recognize the PRC as the sole government of China and sever ties with the Taiwan authorities.[33] This has resulted in over 180 countries maintaining diplomatic recognition of the PRC, often involving switches from prior ROC relations upon adherence to the principle.[2] Domestically, the principle underpins legal frameworks such as the 2005 Anti-Secession Law, which declares Taiwan part of China and authorizes the state to adopt "non-peaceful means" if Taiwan declares formal independence or peaceful reunification becomes impossible due to secessionist actions.[34] Empirically, the PRC's claim of undivided sovereignty faces challenges from the reality of Taiwan's separate de facto governance since 1949, when the ROC government relocated there amid the Chinese Civil War, establishing autonomous institutions, a distinct military, and an economy operating independently of Beijing's control.[35] Taiwan has conducted regular democratic elections, including direct presidential votes since 1996, without PRC jurisdiction or interference, underscoring a 75-year absence of effective PRC authority over the island despite the principle's assertions.[36] This disconnect highlights that while the principle serves as an ideological and diplomatic cornerstone for the PRC, it does not reflect the causal reality of divided control established post-1949.

ROC's Position and "One China, Different Interpretations"

The Republic of China (ROC), established in 1912 as the successor to the Qing Dynasty, historically asserted itself as the sole legitimate government over all of China, maintaining territorial claims encompassing the mainland following the Chinese Civil War's retreat to Taiwan in 1949. This stance derived from constitutional continuity and traditional notions of dynastic legitimacy, positioning the ROC as the rightful authority amid the People's Republic of China's (PRC) establishment on the mainland.[37] Under President Lee Teng-hui, the ROC's position shifted in the late 1990s toward recognizing distinct political entities across the strait. In a July 9, 1999, interview with Deutsche Welle, Lee described cross-strait relations as "state-to-state" or "at least special state-to-state relations," emphasizing Taiwan's separate sovereignty and rejecting subordination to the PRC, a formulation later refined to "special state-to-state relationship" in official statements. This marked a departure from irredentist claims, prioritizing Taiwan's de facto governance and democratic evolution over nominal unification. Subsequent administrations, including under Chen Shui-bian and later presidents, affirmed a "status quo" approach, maintaining operational independence without formal independence declarations to avoid provoking PRC aggression.[38][39] Central to intermittent cross-strait dialogue is the "1992 Consensus," an informal understanding from meetings between ROC's Mainland Affairs Council (then Straits Exchange Foundation) and PRC counterparts in Hong Kong. The Kuomintang (KMT)-led ROC interpreted it as both sides adhering to "one China" but with respective interpretations: the ROC as the legitimate central government of all China, and the PRC as a regime exercising de facto control over mainland territories. This allowed pragmatic engagement without conceding sovereignty.[40][41] The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which has governed since 2016, rejects the 1992 Consensus as a retrospective invention lacking mutual agreement, arguing it obscures Taiwan's distinct identity and enables PRC leverage. Instead, DPP administrations stress consensual foundations for any dialogue, rooted in Taiwan's empirical realities: a population of approximately 23.1 million as of mid-2025, functioning as a sovereign entity with its own military, currency, and international engagements under the name "Chinese Taipei" or similar.[42][43] These realities underpin the ROC's insistence on self-determination, evidenced by consolidated democratic institutions following the first direct presidential election on March 23, 1996, which installed Lee Teng-hui with 54% of the vote amid multi-party competition. Taiwan's governance—marked by regular legislative elections, judicial independence, and economic metrics like a 2024 GDP per capita exceeding $36,000—demonstrates effective statehood for its populace, incompatible with PRC subsumption under an authoritarian system lacking comparable freedoms. This "one China, different interpretations" framework thus serves as a tactical asymmetry: the ROC interprets "China" as its own constitutional domain, while pragmatically accommodating PRC views to preserve peace without yielding autonomy.[39][43]

US One China Policy and Strategic Ambiguity

The United States One China policy acknowledges the PRC's stance that there is one China, including Taiwan, without endorsing or recognizing Beijing's sovereignty claim over the island. This formulation originated in the February 27, 1972, Shanghai Communiqué issued during President Richard Nixon's visit to China, stating: "The United States acknowledges that all Chinese on either side of the Taiwan Strait maintain there is but one China and that Taiwan is a part of China. The United States Government does not challenge that position."[44] The deliberate use of "acknowledges" rather than "recognizes" or "accepts" reflects a pragmatic distinction, allowing the US to maintain unofficial relations with Taiwan while prioritizing regional stability over explicit alignment with either side's territorial assertions.[45] On January 1, 1979, the US formally recognized the PRC as China's sole legal government and terminated diplomatic ties with the ROC in Taipei, yet Congress simultaneously passed the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA) to safeguard Taiwan's security. The TRA requires the US president to notify Congress of any threat to Taiwan's security and directs the provision of "defensive articles and services" necessary for Taiwan to maintain sufficient self-defense capability, while deeming any resort to force or coercion altering Taiwan's status a "grave concern" to US interests.[46] This legislative framework underscores the policy's emphasis on deterrence through arms sales—totaling over $20 billion in approved notifications since 2019 alone—without formal alliance obligations.[47] Central to the policy is strategic ambiguity regarding US military intervention in a potential PRC-Taiwan conflict, a deliberate vagueness intended to discourage Beijing from aggression by implying possible US response while dissuading Taipei from unilateral independence moves that could provoke invasion. This approach, rooted in the TRA's non-committal language on intervention, has empirically sustained peace across the Taiwan Strait since the last major PRC bombardment in 1958, as the uncertainty deters risk calculation by both parties without explicit guarantees that might encourage miscalculation.[2] In 1982, amid negotiations over the third US-PRC joint communiqué limiting arms sales, President Ronald Reagan privately conveyed the "Six Assurances" to Taiwan, pledging no termination date for arms sales, no pressure on Taiwan to enter negotiations with the PRC, no alteration of TRA terms, no mediation role without Taiwan's consent, no consultations with Beijing on Taiwan's arms needs, and US judgments on sales based solely on Taiwan's requirements.[48] These assurances reinforced ambiguity by balancing reassurance to Taiwan against PRC sensitivities, though critics from think tanks like the Heritage Foundation argue that recent escalations in US-Taiwan interactions—such as high-level visits and enhanced arms packages—have partially eroded the opacity, potentially signaling firmer commitments amid Beijing's military buildup exceeding 2,000 missiles targeted at Taiwan as of 2023.[49] Nonetheless, official US statements continue to uphold the policy's core: unofficial ties with Taiwan, opposition to unilateral status changes, and promotion of peaceful resolution, prioritizing empirical stability over doctrinal clarity.

Policy Evolution

Key Communiqués and Agreements (1970s-1990s)

The Shanghai Communiqué, issued on February 27, 1972, following President Richard Nixon's visit to the People's Republic of China (PRC), marked an initial U.S. accommodation to the PRC's stance on Taiwan. In it, the PRC reiterated that Taiwan is an inalienable part of China and that the PRC government is the sole legal government of China, while the U.S. stated it "does not challenge" the position that all Chinese on either side of the Taiwan Strait maintain there is one China, with Taiwan as part of China. The document emphasized U.S. interest in a peaceful settlement of the Taiwan question, reflecting deliberate textual ambiguity that preserved U.S. flexibility without explicit endorsement of PRC sovereignty claims over Taiwan.[44] The Joint Communiqué on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations, effective January 1, 1979, advanced U.S.-PRC normalization by recognizing the PRC as the sole legal government of China and acknowledging Taiwan as part of China, while severing formal diplomatic ties with the Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan. The U.S. committed to withdrawing military personnel from Taiwan by year's end and abrogating the 1954 U.S.-ROC Mutual Defense Treaty, but it retained the right to maintain unofficial commercial, cultural, and other relations with the Taiwanese people through the American Institute in Taiwan. This arrangement embodied strategic ambiguity, deferring to PRC claims on paper while enabling continued U.S. support for Taiwan's security via the concurrent Taiwan Relations Act, which mandated arms provision for Taiwan's defense needs.[50] The August 17, 1982, U.S.-PRC Joint Communiqué addressed ongoing tensions over U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, with the U.S. stating its intent to gradually reduce such sales, leading ultimately to their cessation, in light of the PRC's professed commitment to peaceful reunification as outlined in its 1979 Message to Compatriots in Taiwan and 1981 nine-point proposal. The PRC, in turn, pledged no use of force against Taiwan and recognition of the "Taiwan authorities' realistic difficulties" in adjusting to normalization. However, the agreement's implementation remained conditional on maintaining peace in the Taiwan Strait, as clarified in contemporaneous U.S. interpretations, including President Ronald Reagan's letter emphasizing no fixed timeline for ending sales and the need for PRC restraint—a pragmatic equilibrium that sustained U.S. leverage without conceding to immediate PRC demands.[51] In response to these developments, the ROC government adopted the Guidelines for National Unification on February 23, 1991, via its National Unification Council, outlining a phased approach to cross-strait relations: short-term mutual non-subordination and exchange to build trust; medium-term negotiation of symmetrical political relations, potentially via confederation; and long-term constitutional unification under democracy, freedom, and equitable wealth distribution. This framework positioned the ROC as the legitimate authority over all China while pragmatically engaging the mainland without immediate sovereignty concessions, fostering economic interdependence amid unresolved political status.[52] Unofficial talks between the ROC's Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) and the PRC's Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) in 1992, culminating in the Koo-Wang meetings of April 1993, produced the "1992 Consensus"—a verbal understanding that both sides affirm one China but hold differing interpretations thereof, with the ROC viewing "China" as the ROC and the PRC as the mainland regime under eventual ROC leadership. This consensus enabled semi-official dialogue and economic accords without formal diplomatic recognition, serving as a de facto truce that prioritized stability and trade growth over irredentist resolution.[53]

PRC's Anti-Secession Law and Reunification Threats

The Anti-Secession Law was enacted by the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress on March 14, 2005, and promulgated by President Hu Jintao through Presidential Decree No. 34, entering into force immediately.[54] Comprising nine articles, the law explicitly declares Taiwan an inalienable part of China's territory and aims to prevent and counter secessionist activities that would separate Taiwan from China, framing such actions as threats to national sovereignty and territorial integrity.[54] Central to the law is Article 8, which authorizes the state to adopt "non-peaceful means and other necessary measures" to safeguard sovereignty if Taiwan independence forces effect secession, if major incidents arise that could precipitate secession, or if possibilities for peaceful reunification are exhausted.[55][56] This clause marks a formal codification of coercive options, elevating prior rhetorical warnings into binding domestic legal doctrine and providing a doctrinal basis for potential military action without requiring immediate de jure independence declarations by Taiwan.[56] The legislation emerged amid escalating cross-strait tensions following the 2000 election of Chen Shui-bian of the Democratic Progressive Party, whose administration advanced policies such as constitutional amendments and referendum mechanisms that Beijing interpreted as steps toward de facto independence.[57] By 2005, after Chen's 2004 re-election amid disputed vote recounts, the law responded to these developments by clarifying Beijing's thresholds for intervention, eliminating ambiguities in prior policy statements and signaling intolerance for gradual erosion of the status quo.[57][55] While the law nominally prioritizes peaceful reunification—promoting the "one country, two systems" model extended to Taiwan—empirical outcomes in Hong Kong have undermined its appeal, as the 2019 protests against extradition legislation exposed breakdowns in promised high autonomy, culminating in Beijing's 2020 national security law that imposed restrictions on dissent, elections, and media, contrary to the 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration's guarantees.[56] Taiwan's rejection of the model predates these events but intensified thereafter, with public opinion polls consistently showing over 80% opposition to unification under such terms by 2020.[56] The law thus institutionalizes a unidirectional coercive framework, prioritizing PRC-defined unity over negotiated consent and underscoring domination as the operative causal mechanism when persuasion fails.[55][56]

ROC Democratization and Status Quo Affirmations

The Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan underwent significant democratization beginning with the lifting of martial law on July 15, 1987, by President Chiang Ching-kuo, which had been in place since 1949 and suppressed political opposition.[58] This reform enabled the formation of opposition parties, including the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) in 1986, and paved the way for constitutional amendments that transitioned Taiwan from authoritarian rule to a multiparty democracy.[59] The process culminated in Taiwan's first direct presidential election on March 23, 1996, won by incumbent President Lee Teng-hui of the Kuomintang (KMT), marking a shift from indirect selection by the National Assembly.[60][39] The DPP's ascent emphasized a distinct Taiwanese identity, diverging from the KMT's historical emphasis on a unified Chinese identity encompassing the mainland.[61] The party, rooted in the pro-democracy movement, advocated for recognition of Taiwan's separate cultural and historical experience, gaining power with Chen Shui-bian's presidential victory in 2000.[62] This identity shift reinforced internal consensus against immediate unification, prioritizing democratic self-determination over the original ROC constitutional claim to represent all of China. During Ma Ying-jeou's KMT presidency from 2008 to 2016, cross-strait economic dialogues resumed under the framework of no unification, no independence, and no use of force, with Ma explicitly stating opposition to unification without the consent of the Taiwanese people.[63][64] Despite closer ties, such as the 2010 Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement, Ma maintained the status quo, avoiding political negotiations on sovereignty. The DPP's return under Tsai Ing-wen in 2016 rejected the 1992 Consensus—a KMT-accepted understanding of "one China" with differing interpretations—while upholding the status quo and refusing to endorse unification preconditions.[65][66] Public sentiment has consistently affirmed the status quo through polls and electoral outcomes, with surveys showing 80-90% preference for maintaining the current de facto independence indefinitely or delaying decisions on unification or formal independence.[67] For instance, National Chengchi University polls from 1994 to 2024 indicate sustained high support for the status quo, reflecting wariness of both forced unification and provocative declarations amid Taiwan's democratic consolidation.[68] Referendums, such as the 2021 initiatives backed by the KMT to adjust diplomatic or trade policies potentially easing China ties, failed to pass, underscoring voter resistance to changes perceived as conceding to Beijing's preferences.[69] The 2024 presidential election, won by DPP's Lai Ching-te, further reinforced this by campaigning on continuity of Tsai's approach, prioritizing defense and democratic values over concessions.[70]

Domestic Perspectives

Views in Mainland China

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) officially upholds the One China principle, asserting that Taiwan is an inalienable part of China and that reunification represents a core national interest and historical inevitability rooted in shared ethnic, cultural, and territorial claims. This stance frames any moves toward Taiwanese independence as separatism threatening national unity, with state doctrine emphasizing peaceful reunification while reserving non-peaceful options under the 2005 Anti-Secession Law.[56] State-controlled education and media propagate this narrative extensively, integrating Taiwan-related content into patriotic curricula to instill views of reunification as essential to the "great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation."[71] The 2023 Patriotic Education Law reinforces this by mandating ideological training that portrays Taiwan's separation as a temporary aberration from civil war, destined for resolution under CCP leadership, with media outlets like Xinhua and People's Daily routinely depicting cross-strait integration as public consensus.[71] Public opinion surveys in mainland China reflect high levels of support for the One China framework, though conducted under censorship constraints that limit expression of dissent.[72] A 2023 poll indicated 55% support for full-scale military action to achieve unification, but a 2025 survey showed a shift toward opposition to force, prioritizing diplomatic and economic means amid recognition of potential costs.[73] This nationalism bolsters CCP legitimacy, substituting for ideological appeal amid economic challenges like slowing growth and youth unemployment exceeding 15% in 2024, by redirecting domestic frustrations toward external unification goals.[74] Dissent from the official line is equated with separatism and severely punished under national security provisions, including the Criminal Law's articles on splitting the state, which carry penalties up to life imprisonment or death.[75] In June 2024, Supreme People's Court guidelines explicitly targeted "die-hard" Taiwan independence advocates, extending to mainland expressions that could incite division, as seen in prosecutions of individuals for online advocacy challenging reunification.[76] Such measures suppress alternative views, including acknowledgment of Taiwan's distinct democratic evolution, ensuring the narrative remains unchallenged domestically.[77]

Viewpoints in Taiwan

In Taiwan, political viewpoints on the One China framework diverge primarily along partisan lines, reflecting ideological commitments to either cross-strait accommodation or assertive autonomy. The Kuomintang (KMT) and allied Pan-Blue forces endorse the 1992 Consensus, interpreting "one China" to mean the Republic of China (ROC) framework encompassing both Taiwan and the mainland, with an emphasis on peaceful dialogue and potential future unification under democratic terms that preserve Taiwan's de facto governance.[78] In contrast, the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and Pan-Green coalition repudiate the 1992 Consensus, viewing it as conceding to Beijing's narrative, and instead stress Taiwan's separate sovereignty, democratic institutions, and the empirical reality of its independent military (Republic of China Armed Forces), currency (New Taiwan Dollar), and electoral processes, while officially committing to the status quo to avert conflict.[78][79] Public sentiment, as captured in longitudinal polls, overwhelmingly favors maintaining Taiwan's current autonomous status over unification or formal independence declarations. Data from National Chengchi University's Election Study Center indicate that, as of June 2024, only 6.7% support unification at any point (1.1% immediately), while immediate independence garners about 5.3%, with roughly 84% preferring the indefinite status quo or deferring a decision—figures stable since the early 2000s but with unification support consistently below 10%.[68] Similarly, the Taiwan Public Opinion Foundation's February 2025 survey found a clear majority aspiring to independence as an ideal outcome but pragmatically endorsing status quo preservation amid military threats.[80] A parallel shift in self-identity underscores resistance to Beijing's unification claims, with polls showing a decline in dual or Chinese identification. National Chengchi University data for June 2024 report 63.4% identifying exclusively as Taiwanese, 30.4% as both Taiwanese and Chinese, and just 2.4% as Chinese only—a trend accelerating from the 1990s when dual identity exceeded 50%, driven by Taiwan's democratization and generational turnover.[81] Pew Research Center's January 2024 survey corroborates this, with 67% selecting "Taiwanese only" and only 3% "Chinese only," attributing the pattern to lived experiences under Taiwan's liberal democracy versus perceptions of authoritarianism on the mainland.[62] This empirical preference for autonomy stems from causal assessments of the People's Republic of China's (PRC) political system, where unification is seen as incompatible with Taiwan's freedoms. Post-2019 Hong Kong protests, which exposed PRC suppression of dissent under the National Security Law, polls reflect heightened aversion: Brookings Institution analysis notes that Taiwanese cite the PRC's one-party rule—not mere cultural differences—as the core barrier, with over 80% rejecting absorption into Beijing's model given Taiwan's functioning separate state apparatus.[82][36] Taiwan's de facto sovereignty, evidenced by its 23 million population electing presidents since 1996, issuing passports recognized by 59 nations (as of 2024), and fielding a 215,000-strong military, reinforces this reality, rendering PRC claims abstract against observable self-governance.[68]

International Policies

United States Policy Details

The Taiwan Relations Act, enacted on April 10, 1979, mandates that the United States provide Taiwan with defense articles and services necessary to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability against potential coercion. The Act also requires the U.S. President to notify Congress of any threat to Taiwan's security or societal systems and to maintain the capacity for resisting armed attack through such means as deemed appropriate. It explicitly opposes resolution of Taiwan-related issues by non-peaceful means, including boycotts or embargoes, and affirms that any such effort would be a grave concern to the United States.[83] To implement unofficial relations post-derecognition of the Republic of China, the Act authorized the establishment of the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT), which functions as a de facto U.S. embassy in Taipei, handling consular services, commercial ties, and cultural exchanges under a nonprofit framework with State Department oversight.[47] AIT's new facility opened in 2018, symbolizing continued substantive engagement despite the absence of formal diplomatic recognition.[84] The U.S. Department of State has consistently stated opposition to any unilateral changes to the Taiwan Strait status quo from either side, viewing such actions as destabilizing.[85] In recent years, the Biden administration introduced elements of greater clarity on defense commitments while preserving strategic ambiguity. President Biden stated in September 2022 that U.S. forces would defend Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion, a position reiterated in multiple interviews despite White House clarifications that it did not alter official policy.[86] [87] This approach contrasts with explicit endorsements of the People's Republic of China's One China principle seen in other nations' policies, aiming instead to deter aggression through uncertainty about U.S. intervention without provoking escalation.[49] Legislative proposals like the Taiwan Policy Act of 2022 (S.4428), introduced in the 117th Congress, sought to enhance Taiwan's resilience with measures including $4.5 billion in security assistance over four years, comprehensive military training programs, and sanctions frameworks against coercion attempts, though the bill did not pass in full and influenced subsequent appropriations.[88] [89] Empirical outcomes indicate that this framework of ambiguity has effectively deterred overt Chinese military action across the Strait for over four decades by imposing dual uncertainties—on Beijing regarding U.S. resolve and on Taipei against provocative moves—while enabling arms sales and deterrence signaling that have prevented coercion without direct confrontation.[49] [90]

Positions of Japan, Russia, and Other Powers

Japan normalized diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC) in 1972, recognizing the PRC as the sole legal government of China and adhering to the One China policy, while severing formal ties with the Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan.[91] Despite this, Japan maintains robust unofficial relations with Taiwan through organizations such as the Japan-Taiwan Exchange Association, which functions as a de facto embassy handling economic, cultural, and consular affairs.[92] In its 2021 Defense White Paper, Japan explicitly linked the stability of Taiwan to its own national security, stating that "the stability of Taiwan is by nature indispensable to the stability of Japan in the Taiwan Strait," marking a departure from prior reticence and reflecting heightened concerns over PRC military activities.[93] This stance underscores pragmatic divergences, prioritizing regional security amid supply chain dependencies on Taiwan's semiconductors over strict adherence to PRC interpretations of the One China principle.[94] Russia consistently affirms support for the PRC's One China principle, viewing Taiwan as an inalienable part of China and opposing any forms of separatism or external interference.[95] In a February 2022 joint statement with China, Russia reaffirmed this position, condemning U.S. provocations in the Taiwan Strait.[95] President Vladimir Putin reiterated alignment in November 2024, describing China as Russia's ally and backing its claims over Taiwan, while in January 2025 discussions with Xi Jinping, Russia confirmed its "unwavering" commitment to the principle.[96][97] However, Russia's engagement with Taiwan remains minimal and opportunistic, focused on economic interests like technology imports rather than challenging PRC sovereignty, as evidenced by limited official interactions and prioritization of the Sino-Russian strategic partnership.[98] Among other powers, the European Union (EU) formally upholds a One China policy while advocating for the status quo and peaceful resolution of cross-strait differences without threat or force.[99] In practice, the EU has pursued a de facto "Two-Chinas" approach since the early 2020s, expanding trade, investment, and research cooperation with Taiwan—evidenced by a €14.7 billion trade deficit in 2024 driven by semiconductors—amid de-risking from PRC dependencies, though Beijing criticizes such ties as violating the policy.[100][101] India, similarly, reaffirmed its One China policy in August 2025 during boundary talks with China, stating commitment to the framework and recognizing Taiwan as part of China, though New Delhi clarified no policy shift and continues economic and technological ties with Taiwan without formal diplomatic recognition.[102][103] This reflects pragmatic balancing: formal nods to PRC sensitivities alongside growing unofficial Taiwan engagement for supply chain resilience, particularly in electronics and amid India-China border tensions.[104]

Global Diplomatic Recognitions and Taiwan's Unofficial Ties

As of 2025, the People's Republic of China (PRC) maintains formal diplomatic recognition from 182 countries, encompassing 94% of United Nations member states, while the Republic of China (ROC), governing Taiwan, holds such ties with only 12 UN members—Belize, Eswatini, Guatemala, Haiti, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Palau, Paraguay, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Tuvalu—plus the Holy See.[105][106][107] These limited formal recognitions for the ROC reflect a historical pattern of switches, with 10 countries shifting allegiance to the PRC between 2016 and 2024, primarily motivated by Beijing's offers of economic aid, infrastructure investments, and trade incentives rather than broad international consensus on Taiwan's sovereign status.[108][109] Taiwan's efforts to secure non-member observer status in the UN have been consistently blocked by PRC opposition since 2008, reinforcing Beijing's dominance in global forums.[110] Despite this isolation in formal diplomacy, Taiwan sustains resilient unofficial networks, operating approximately 60 representative offices—such as Taipei Economic and Cultural Offices—across UN member states and entities like Somaliland, facilitating trade, consular services, and cultural exchanges without full embassy status.[111] These informal ties underscore de facto acceptance of Taiwan's international engagement, bolstered by economic diplomacy initiatives like the New Southbound Policy launched in 2016, which has deepened cooperation with 18 countries in Southeast Asia, South Asia, Australia, and New Zealand through investments exceeding NT$1 trillion (about US$31 billion) in sectors including technology, agriculture, and education by 2023.[112][113] Such strategies demonstrate Taiwan's ability to leverage its economic strengths to maintain substantive relations, circumventing PRC pressure and highlighting that recognitions often prioritize pragmatic benefits over ideological alignment with Beijing's One China principle.[109]

Cross-Strait Relations

Economic and Trade Interdependence

Cross-strait trade between Taiwan and the mainland reached US$267.8 billion in 2023, with Taiwan maintaining a significant trade surplus.[114] Taiwanese firms have cumulatively approved investments in the mainland totaling US$206.37 billion across 45,523 cases as of 2023, concentrating in manufacturing, electronics, and services sectors to leverage lower costs and access the vast Chinese market.[115] These flows underscore mutual economic benefits, with Taiwan exporting machinery, electronics, and semiconductors while importing raw materials and consumer goods from the mainland, fostering supply chain integration despite political tensions. The Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), signed on June 29, 2010, and effective from September 12, 2010, established tariff reductions on 539 Taiwanese items and 267 mainland items, alongside provisions for investment protection and dispute resolution.[116] ECFA boosted bilateral trade by facilitating market access, contributing to Taiwan's GDP growth through expanded exports, though critics argue it increased Taiwan's reliance on the mainland economy without reciprocal opening in services.[117] However, the mainland has employed economic coercion within this framework, such as suspending Taiwanese pineapple imports on March 1, 2021, officially citing pest detections but widely interpreted as retaliation against pro-independence rhetoric, affecting over 90% of Taiwan's pineapple exports previously destined for the mainland.[118] Semiconductors exemplify critical interdependence, with Taiwan exporting up to 54.2% of its semiconductor output to China in 2023, powering mainland tech assembly despite U.S. export controls limiting advanced nodes.[119] Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), holding over 60% of the global foundry market, derives only about 10-13% of revenue directly from Chinese clients, yet broader ecosystem ties amplify vulnerability.[120] This asymmetry—China's greater need for Taiwanese chips versus Taiwan's diversified markets—positions interdependence as a potential stabilizer, raising the economic costs of conflict through disrupted global supply chains estimated to exceed trillions in losses, though historical precedents indicate trade ties do not invariably prevent war.[121] Conversely, the mainland leverages these links for political pressure, using selective bans and market access as tools to deter Taiwanese moves toward formal independence, thereby converting economic mutualism into asymmetric influence.[122]

Military Tensions and Gray Zone Tactics

The People's Republic of China (PRC) employs gray zone tactics against the Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan, involving persistent but non-kinetic military activities to assert dominance and erode resolve without triggering full-scale war. These include regular incursions by People's Liberation Army (PLA) aircraft into Taiwan's Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ), a buffer area beyond territorial airspace where identification is required. In 2022, PLA aircraft logged 1,737 ADIZ incursions, a 79% rise from 972 in 2021, normalizing PRC presence and straining Taiwan's air resources.[123] Similar naval activities by the PLA Navy (PLAN) and China Coast Guard occur in contiguous zones, with vessels crossing the Taiwan Strait median line hundreds of times annually to challenge the status quo.[124] A notable escalation followed U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan on August 2, 2022, prompting PRC military exercises from August 4 to 7 that encircled the island. During these drills, the PLA fired 11 ballistic missiles into zones north, south, and east of Taiwan, with five landing east of the main island—marking the first overflights of Taiwan's territory by PRC missiles.[125][126] These actions simulated a blockade and tested U.S. and ROC responses, but ceased after a week without further kinetic engagement, illustrating calibrated coercion.[127] Underlying these tactics is the PRC's military buildup, with the PLA comprising approximately 2 million active personnel against Taiwan's 169,000.[128][129] The PLA Rocket Force fields hypersonic weapons like the DF-17, with ranges of 1,500-2,500 km, designed to evade defenses and strike high-value targets in a Taiwan contingency.[130] Amphibious capabilities have expanded, including Type 075 landing helicopter docks and civilian roll-on/roll-off ships for troop transport, enabling potential cross-strait invasion despite logistical challenges like the 100-mile strait and monsoon seasons.[131] In response, Taiwan pursues an asymmetric "porcupine" defense concept within its Overall Defense Concept, prioritizing affordable, mobile systems such as anti-ship missiles, sea mines, drones, and fast-attack craft to impose high costs on invaders rather than matching PRC symmetry.[132] The U.S. bolsters this via the Taiwan Relations Act, with undelivered arms sales exceeding $21 billion as of late 2024, including HIMARS launchers and Abrams tanks to enhance deterrence.[133] These gray zone pressures have compelled Taiwan to extend conscription to one year from 2024 and invest in reserves, while exposing PRC constraints, as repeated incursions yield no territorial gains and risk overstretch without assured victory.[134]

Diplomatic and Cultural Exchanges

Following the election of Tsai Ing-wen as president of Taiwan in 2016, the People's Republic of China (PRC) suspended semi-official cross-strait communication channels, including negotiations between Taiwan's Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) and the PRC's Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS), which had previously handled civil, business, and cultural matters.[78] This suspension halted structured dialogues established under frameworks like the 1992 Consensus, with the PRC conditioning resumption on Taiwan's acceptance of preconditions affirming "one China."[135] The SEF continues limited administrative functions, such as facilitating stranded travelers or postal services, but broader cultural and educational exchanges have diminished amid political barriers.[136] People-to-people interactions face significant restrictions, exemplified by the PRC's halt on issuing individual travel permits to Taiwan for residents of 47 mainland cities starting August 1, 2019, in response to escalating tensions.[137] Prior to 2016, annual mainland tourist visits to Taiwan peaked at over 4 million, but numbers plummeted after Beijing discouraged group tours and imposed visa curbs, citing Taiwan's refusal to endorse unification principles.[138] Sporadic cultural events persist through non-governmental channels, such as academic conferences or arts exhibitions coordinated by the SEF, though these are vetted for alignment with PRC sensitivities and often prioritize narratives of shared heritage over Taiwan's distinct identity.[139] Analysts note that such exchanges, while promoting interpersonal ties, serve Beijing's strategy to incrementally normalize unification rhetoric among participants.[140] Diplomatically, the PRC has intensified efforts to isolate Taiwan by inducing switches in formal recognitions, as seen on January 15, 2024, when Nauru severed ties with Taiwan—its 12th remaining ally at the time—and established relations with Beijing, citing economic incentives and the "one China" principle.[141] This poaching tactic, which reduced Taiwan's diplomatic partners from 22 in 2016 to 12 by early 2024, leverages financial aid and infrastructure pledges to pressure small states.[109] Taiwan responds through values-oriented diplomacy, emphasizing democracy, human rights, and technical aid to bolster unofficial ties and counter PRC influence in regions like the Pacific, where it maintains representative offices despite formal isolation.[142] These efforts highlight persistent barriers, as Beijing views any substantive exchange as contingent on Taiwan conceding sovereignty claims.[143]

Recent Developments (2020s)

Taiwan Elections and Leadership Changes

In the 2020 Taiwanese presidential election held on January 11, incumbent President Tsai Ing-wen of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) secured re-election with 57.1% of the popular vote, defeating Kuomintang (KMT) candidate Han Kuo-yu who received 38.6%.[144] This landslide victory, alongside the DPP's retention of a legislative majority, reflected strong public support for Tsai's firm stance against Beijing's unification demands, particularly amid heightened cross-strait tensions following Hong Kong protests.[145] The 2024 presidential election on January 13 marked a historic third consecutive win for the DPP, with Vice President Lai Ching-te elected president after garnering 40.05% of the votes (5,586,019 ballots), ahead of KMT's Hou Yu-ih at 33.49% and Taiwan People's Party's Ko Wen-je at 26.46%.[146] Despite a fragmented opposition and lower voter turnout of 71.86%, Lai's victory—conducted under explicit threats from the People's Republic of China (PRC) labeling him a separatist—underscored sustained DPP leadership committed to resisting subsumption under PRC sovereignty claims.[147] However, the DPP lost its legislative majority, with the KMT securing 52 seats and the TPP 8 in the 113-seat Yuan, complicating policy implementation while affirming presidential continuity in sovereignty defense.[148] Public opinion polls throughout the 2020s consistently demonstrate overwhelming Taiwanese rejection of PRC-proposed unification frameworks, with over 80% opposing "one country, two systems" in a 2025 survey, far exceeding earlier figures like 89% in 2019.[149] Support for maintaining the status quo—neither formal independence nor unification—hovers around 80-90% in serial polls, reinforcing electoral outcomes favoring DPP policies that prioritize de facto autonomy over Beijing's "One China" assertions.[68] These sentiments, evident in the DPP's repeated presidential successes despite economic interdependence with the mainland, signal a hardened societal resistance to political integration, prioritizing self-determination amid PRC coercion.[82]

PRC Responses and Escalations (2024-2025)

Following the inauguration of Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te on May 20, 2024, the People's Republic of China (PRC) initiated large-scale military exercises designated "Joint Sword-2024A" on May 23, 2024, encircling Taiwan and its outlying islands. These drills involved over 100 aircraft and dozens of naval vessels, marking one of the most extensive operations in the Taiwan Strait to date, with simulated attacks on key ports and energy facilities. The exercises were framed by PRC authorities as a "stern warning" against "separatist acts," directly referencing Lai's speech, which emphasized Taiwan's distinct existence from the mainland.[150][151] In October 2024, the PRC conducted further drills under "Joint Sword-2024B" following Lai's National Day address, expanding simulated blockades and integrating coast guard vessels to assert control over maritime approaches. These actions demonstrated an escalation in frequency and scale, with aircraft crossing the Taiwan Strait median line more routinely, normalizing PRC presence while heightening collision risks between forces. Empirical assessments indicate such gray-zone tactics have not yielded concessions from Taiwan but have correlated with increased regional military spending and alliance coordination, underscoring limited coercive efficacy amid domestic PRC economic strains.[152][153] On October 24, 2025, the PRC officially designated October 25 as "Taiwan Restoration Day," commemorating the 1945 handover of Taiwan from Japanese administration to the Republic of China government, thereby invoking historical claims to sovereignty. This national-level observance, ratified by PRC legislative bodies, included ceremonies emphasizing "indisputable" territorial integrity and warnings against independence movements. The initiative serves as symbolic escalation, reinforcing propaganda narratives without immediate kinetic action, though it coincides with heightened patrols near Taiwan-administered islands.[154] Parallel coercive measures intensified, including a documented 60 percent surge in PRC-linked disinformation campaigns targeting Taiwanese youth via social media and outlets in 2024, aiming to erode public support for defensive policies. While targeted sanctions on individual Taiwanese officials persisted from prior years, broader trade reviews and export restrictions on dual-use goods exemplified economic pressure tactics. In the South China Sea, PRC naval warnings to the Philippines in September 2025, amid joint patrols with allies, reflected spillover escalations tied to perceived alignments with Taiwan's security posture, though direct gains in compliance remained elusive.[155][156]

International Reactions and Policy Adjustments

In response to heightened tensions in the Taiwan Strait during the 2020s, the United States has intensified military support for Taiwan through accelerated arms sales and multilateral frameworks. In October 2024, the U.S. approved $2 billion in arms to Taiwan, including advanced surface-to-air missiles, marking a shift toward more proactive defense capabilities amid PRC gray-zone activities.[157] By early 2025, the backlog of undelivered U.S. arms notifications stood at $21.54 billion, with Taiwan confirming additional acquisitions under a special defense budget to counter rising threats.[158] Indirect bolstering via QUAD and AUKUS has emphasized Taiwan's role in regional stability, as seen in the 2021 AUSMIN joint statement supporting Taiwan's participation in international organizations where statehood is not required.[159] Expectations for a Trump-Xi summit in late October 2025, potentially in South Korea, reflect U.S. efforts to manage escalation while prioritizing issues like rare earths and fentanyl, though analysts anticipate limited breakthroughs given mutual perceptions of leverage.[160][161] Japan has responded by substantially increasing defense expenditures, aiming for 2% of GDP by 2027—up from 1%—to address vulnerabilities in the Taiwan Strait, including plans for enhanced missile capabilities and joint exercises.[162] U.S. officials have urged further hikes, citing PRC activities like strait transits and election interference as direct threats to Japanese security.[163] In Europe, the EU has advanced de-risking measures, including coordinated foreign direct investment screening for sensitive technologies like semiconductors, amid deepening economic ties with Taiwan in supply chains and critical tech.[164][165] This reflects a pragmatic "two-Chinas" approach, maintaining formal One China policy adherence while expanding unofficial cooperation with Taiwan to mitigate invasion risks.[101] Broader trends indicate diminishing global deference to PRC sovereignty claims, evidenced by supply chain diversification strategies like "China Plus One," which have prompted firms to shift manufacturing to Southeast Asia and other regions to reduce exposure to geopolitical risks.[166] Public opinion data shows eroding favorability toward China, with Pew Research finding a median of 36% favorable views across 25 countries in 2025, down amid concerns over assertiveness, though views remain mixed in the Global South.[167] Policy debates, such as the Cato Institute's October 2025 proposal for a "new Taiwan consensus" updating the One China framework to affirm peaceful resolution without conceding PRC authority over Taiwan, underscore intellectual shifts toward conditional recognition rather than unqualified acceptance.[168] These adjustments collectively signal a recalibration prioritizing deterrence and economic resilience over strict adherence to Beijing's interpretations.

Controversies and Debates

Legitimacy of Sovereignty Claims

The People's Republic of China (PRC) bases its sovereignty claim over Taiwan primarily on World War II-era documents, including the Cairo Declaration of December 1, 1943, which stated that territories Japan had seized from China, such as Taiwan (then Formosa), should be restored to the Republic of China (ROC), and the Potsdam Proclamation of July 26, 1945, which reaffirmed the terms of the Cairo Declaration.[169][170] These declarations reflected Allied intent following Japan's 1895 acquisition of Taiwan via the Treaty of Shimonoseki, but they were non-binding political statements rather than treaties conferring legal title; sovereignty transfer required formal ratification, which occurred via the 1951 Treaty of San Francisco, where Japan renounced claims to Taiwan without specifying a recipient, leaving its status undetermined.[170] The PRC, established in 1949, has never governed Taiwan, relying instead on a theory of state succession from the pre-1949 ROC, though this lacks empirical basis in territorial control.[171] In contrast, the ROC asserts continuous statehood tracing to its founding on January 1, 1912, as the successor to the Qing Dynasty, with Taiwan under its administration from 1945 until the government's relocation there in December 1949 amid civil war defeat on the mainland.[35] The ROC maintains effective control over Taiwan, exercising all sovereign functions including a separate constitution amended in 1991 to reflect its current territory, independent judiciary, and democratic elections.[78] United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758, adopted October 25, 1971, seated the PRC as China's representative and expelled ROC delegates but addressed only UN membership representation, containing no provisions on Taiwan's sovereignty or territorial status.[172] Legal scholars note this resolution neither partitioned China nor endorsed PRC jurisdiction over Taiwan, preserving the island's de facto autonomy.[173] Sovereignty's legitimacy, grounded in effective governance and the consent of the governed, favors Taiwan's position: since 1949, it has operated as a distinct polity with its own military, currency, and borders, governing over 23 million people through multiparty elections, as evidenced by the Democratic Progressive Party's victories in 2016, 2020, and 2024 presidential polls reflecting public preference for the status quo over unification.[21][174] The PRC's assertion, absent historical exercise of authority or Taiwanese consent, parallels irredentist claims rejected under modern international norms prohibiting conquest, as in post-World War II decolonization principles emphasizing self-determination over revanchist narratives.[175] Mainstream portrayals of Taiwan as a mere "province" often uncritically adopt PRC framing, overlooking these empirical realities despite biases in global institutions toward accommodating Beijing's diplomatic pressure.[78]

Coercion vs. Self-Determination

The People's Republic of China (PRC) maintains that reunification with Taiwan must occur, preferring a "peaceful" process while reserving the right to employ "non-peaceful means" under its 2005 Anti-Secession Law, which authorizes force if Taiwan declares independence, peaceful reunification becomes impossible, or major secession incidents occur.[56] [55] This legal framework underpins frequent military exercises, such as the May 2024 operations involving 111 aircraft and 46 naval vessels encircling Taiwan, and subsequent drills in 2025 that simulated blockades and invasions.[176] [177] These actions, framed by PRC state media as responses to "separatist" rhetoric, demonstrate coercion as a core tactic to deter Taiwan's political autonomy rather than foster voluntary integration.[178] The erosion of Hong Kong's autonomy following the 2020 National Security Law has intensified Taiwanese skepticism toward PRC promises of a "one country, two systems" model, with surveys indicating heightened resentment and a view of the law as a blueprint for suppressing dissent.[179] [180] Beijing's application of the law led to arrests of pro-democracy figures and curtailed civil liberties, outcomes that Taiwanese analysts and officials cite as evidence that PRC unification would dismantle Taiwan's democratic institutions and freedoms.[181] This precedent has correlated with declining support for cross-strait engagement, as PRC coercion—economic sanctions, disinformation, and military posturing—fails to build trust and instead reinforces perceptions of authoritarian overreach.[182] In contrast, Taiwan's polity emphasizes self-determination for its 23 million residents, aligning with the UN Charter's principle of peoples' right to freely determine political status, as articulated in Article 1(2).[183] Public opinion polls consistently show overwhelming rejection of unification: a February 2025 Taiwan Public Opinion Foundation survey found a majority favoring independence as the preferred future, with only minimal support for immediate unification under PRC terms.[80] [68] Taiwan's economic achievements underscore the viability of its system, boasting a 2024 GDP per capita of approximately $34,000 compared to the PRC's $13,300, reflecting higher productivity, innovation, and institutional stability that empirical data attributes to democratic governance and rule of law rather than centralized control.[184] [185] Such coercion appears rooted in the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) imperative to consolidate domestic legitimacy through nationalist narratives, as failed inducements like economic incentives have yielded no progress toward voluntary alignment, instead alienating Taiwanese amid the CCP's internal challenges with ideological cohesion and economic slowdowns. [186] Analysts from security-focused institutions note that this approach prioritizes regime security over mutual prosperity, contrasting with Taiwan's demonstrated success in fostering liberty and self-governance, where public preferences for maintaining de facto independence reflect a causal link between democratic choice and sustained societal resilience.[36]

Critiques of Strategic Ambiguity

The U.S. policy of strategic ambiguity toward Taiwan, formalized in the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, has succeeded in averting direct conflict across the Taiwan Strait for over four decades by deterring both Chinese invasion and Taiwanese moves toward formal independence.[49] This dual deterrence mechanism has preserved de facto peace amid shifting power dynamics, with no amphibious assault attempted despite periodic crises, such as the 1995-1996 Taiwan Strait Crisis.[187] However, critics argue that ambiguity's longevity reflects stasis rather than enduring efficacy, as China's military modernization—evidenced by its expansion of amphibious capabilities to over 60 landing ships by 2023—has eroded the policy's foundational balance.[188] A primary critique is that strategic ambiguity incentivizes Beijing's incremental "salami-slicing" tactics, including frequent air incursions exceeding 1,700 sorties into Taiwan's air defense identification zone in 2022 alone, by signaling potential U.S. non-intervention.[189] This perception of irresolution, reinforced by historical U.S. retreats from commitments like the 1979 derecognition of the Republic of China, undermines deterrence against a revisionist power whose 2027 military readiness goals explicitly target Taiwan contingencies.[190] Empirical assessments indicate ambiguity fails to counter asymmetric escalation, as Taiwan's defense spending hovered below 2.5% of GDP until recent upticks, partly due to perceived U.S. hesitancy fostering complacency.[191] Taiwanese public opinion polls reflect eroding confidence in U.S. resolve, with only 47% believing in firm American defense in a 2023 survey, correlating with heightened Chinese coercion.[191] Proponents of strategic clarity, such as former Pentagon official Elbridge Colby, contend that explicit commitments to repel invasion—paired with robust arms transfers under the Taiwan Enhanced Resilience Act of 2022—would restore credible deterrence without provoking preemptive war, drawing on Cold War precedents where unambiguous U.S. nuclear guarantees stabilized Europe.[188] Ambiguity's mixed record, marked by China's unchecked buildup of hypersonic missiles and carrier strike groups outpacing U.S. regional deployments, suggests it prioritizes short-term diplomatic flexibility over long-term hard-power realism, potentially inviting miscalculation as Beijing interprets restraint as weakness.[187] Alternatives emphasize bolstering Taiwan's asymmetric defenses, like anti-ship missiles and reserves, to impose denial costs on invaders, thereby aligning policy with observable shifts in relative capabilities rather than outdated equilibrium assumptions.[192]

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