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Updated April 26, 2023


Taiwan: Political and Security Issues


Taiwan, which officially calls itself the Republic of China
(ROC), is a self-governing democracy of 23 million people
located across the Taiwan Strait from mainland China.
U.S.-Taiwan relations have been unofficial since January 1,
1979, when the United States established diplomatic
relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC) and
broke them with the ROC. As a condition for diplomatic
relations with the PRC, the U.S. government agreed to
withdraw U.S. military personnel from Taiwan within four
months and to terminate the U.S.-ROC Mutual Defense
Treaty effective January 1, 1980. The 1979 Taiwan
Relations Act (TRA, P.L. 96-8; 22 U.S.C. §3301 et seq.)
provides a legal basis for unofficial relations. See also CRS
In Focus IF10256, U.S.-Taiwan Trade Relations.
The PRC's  stated determination to unify with Taiwan;
resistance to that prospect in Taiwan; and U.S. security
interests and commitments related to Taiwan have led some
U.S. policymakers, including some Members of Congress,
to expand efforts to deter armed conflict over Taiwan.


Figure I. Taiwan


Sources: Graphic by CRS. Map generated by Hannah Fischer using
data from NGA (2017); DoS (2015); Esri (2014); DeLorme (2014).

Modern H istory
Taiwan was a colony of Japan from 1895 to 1945. The
ROC,  then based on mainland China, assumed control of
Taiwan in 1945, after Japan's defeat in World War II. Four
years later, after losing a civil war to the Communist Party
of China (CPC), the ROC's then-ruling party, the
Kuomintang  (KMT),  moved the ROC  government from
mainland China to Taiwan. Until 1991, the KMT continued
to assert that the ROC government on Taiwan was the sole
legitimate government of all China. In 1971, however, U.N.
General Assembly (UNGA)   Resolution 2758 recognized


the PRC's representatives as the only legitimate
representatives of China to the United Nations, and
expelled the representatives of Chiang Kai-shek, the
ROC's  then-leader. Taiwan remains outside the U.N.
The KMT   maintained authoritarian one-party rule on
Taiwan until 1987, when it yielded to public pressure for
political liberalization. The May 2016 inauguration of
President Tsai Ing-wen of the Democratic Progressive Party
(DPP) marked  Taiwan's third peaceful transfer of political
power from one party to another. Tsai won a second four-
year term in 2020, and her party retained its majority in
Taiwan's parliament, the 113-member Legislative Yuan.
Taiwan is to hold presidential and legislative elections on
January 13, 2024. After two consecutive terms as President,
Tsai is ineligible to run again. Vice President Lai Ching-te
(William Lai) is the DPP nominee to succeed her. He has
sought to present his party as the stronger defender of
democracy. The KMT,  now  Taiwan's main opposition
party, has yet to select its presidential candidate. It portrays
itself as better positioned to lower tensions with the PRC
and head off conflict. Also running is Ko Wen-je of the
Taiwan People's Party, a former Taipei mayor, who is
seeking to draw voters from both the DPP and KMT.
President Tsai traveled overseas in the spring of 2023, with
transit stops in the United States. House Speaker Kevin
McCarthy  met with Tsai in California, becoming the
highest-ranking U.S. official to meet with a Taiwan
president on U.S. soil in the era of unofficial relations. The
PRC  condemned  the meeting, with the CPC's Taiwan Work
Office citing it as evidence that the DPP is clinging to U.S.
support to seek independence. The PRC's response
included three days of joint military exercises around
Taiwan and an announcement  from a provincial maritime
safety administration of a special joint patrol and
inspection operation of vessels in the Taiwan Strait, an
apparent attempt to demonstrate PRC sovereignty over
those waters. Taiwan authorities advised shipping
companies to refuse PRC attempts to board or inspect their
vessels; no such attempts were reported. (See CRS In Focus
IF12371, Taiwan Presidents' (.S. Transit Visits.)

U.S.   PoliCy  Toward Taiwan
Since 1979, the United States has maintained a one-China
policy, which it currently describes as being guided by the
TRA;  U.S.-PRC joint communiquds concluded in 1972,
1978, and 1982; and Six Assurances that President
Ronald Reagan communicated  to Taiwan's government in
1982. Under the one-China policy, the United States
maintains official relations with the PRC and unofficial
relations with Taiwan, sells defensive arms to Taiwan,
supports peaceful resolution of cross-Strait differences,
opposes any unilateral changes to the status quo (without
explicitly defining the status quo), and states that it does not
support independence for Taiwan. The U.S. one-China

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