In East Asia, demonstrations of military capability between the People’s Republic of China and Taiwan have been on the rise in recent months.
Mainland China dispatched a swarm of fighter jets near the island in October. Taiwan soon after showed off its upgraded F-16 fleet. Meanwhile, American military trainers have continued to provide support for the island and its democratically elected government.
Professor David Law of the University of Virginia School of Law recently explained what’s behind the tensions in Taiwan, and why the United States has reason to worry.
An international legal expert and political scientist who has studied the governance structures of Asian countries, Law held the Sir Y.K. Pao Chair in Public Law at the University of Hong Kong before joining UVA. He is an affiliated faculty member of 鶹ƽ Department of Politics and East Asia Center.
Q. What is driving this situation from a legal perspective?
A. From an international law perspective, there is a diplomatic recognition question here. The status of Taiwan is up in the air. They don’t have a seat in the United Nations. The vast majority of the world’s countries instead recognize the People’s Republic of China, in lieu of the Republic of China, which is what Taiwan calls itself legally.
Nobody recognizes both China and the Republic of China because the PRC won’t let you recognize both.
Political science, however, is generally not interested in formalities and legal niceties. Do you have effective control of your own borders? Do you control what happens within your territory? Every practical test of sovereignty that you can think of, Taiwan passes with flying colors.
And other nations realize this, even if China won’t allow them to say it. So they treat Taiwan like a country, without calling Taiwan a country.
The People’s Republic of China keeps talking about unification, but now the PRC seems increasingly unwilling to wait for that to happen by peaceful means.
Q. What is Taiwan’s historical relationship with China?
A. Control of Taiwan passed from the Qing Dynasty to the Japanese, then Japan lost in World War II and Taiwan went to the Republic of China for a brief period of time, not even a year, before the civil war in which the Chinese Communists defeated the Republic of China government and won control of everything except a few islands and Taiwan.
But the Chinese Communist Party never exercised sovereignty at any time over Taiwan. Taiwan is simply the last holdout of the previous government of all of China.
David Law is the E. James Kelly Jr., Class of 1965 Research Professor of Law. (Photo by Julia Davis)
So when the PRC says Taiwan is a breakaway province, that’s a bit like the United States describing the United Kingdom as a breakaway province. It’s just wrong from a historical perspective. The more logical argument is that it’s the mainland that broke away.
Q. Why is China so interested in asserting a claim over Taiwan?
A. Taiwan is the world’s leading producer of semiconductors and a majority of global shipping traffic passes through its waters. Those are nice reasons to have Taiwan, but they aren’t the main reason.
The Chinese government is not elected, so it’s always concerned with giving people on the mainland reasons to comply. One side of the coin is pocketbook issues. A lot of their pitch to the Chinese people boils down to something like this: “Rising prosperity means you should be happy with us. If there’s more money in your pocket, don’t question our right to rule.”
But Chinese economic growth is going to slow down because they are facing a self-aggravated demographic crisis. The aging population will outnumber the young, productive population. And that, of course, has been made much, much worse by the government’s one-child policy. The “economic miracle” in China will slow down. It’s just a question of how severely and how quickly.
Then there’s the other side of the coin, which is nationalism. That’s where Taiwan comes in. There’s a rally-around-the-flag effect around taking Taiwan, something the Chinese regime can boast about. It isn’t just politicians in democratic countries who play the patriotism card. If anything, it’s even more important in dictatorships, because what other legitimacy does the government have? People don’t get to vote, but they do get to feel proud.
Q. What explains the current tensions in particular?
A. There are a number of explanations for why the saber-rattling is happening now. They are not mutually exclusive.
One explanation is that it’s domestic politics. The Chinese Communist Party is like any authoritarian regime. It’s focused first and foremost on doing whatever is necessary to hold onto power, and they’re always really nervous about losing power because, you know, they aren’t actually elected, no one actually chose them, and they know this.
And then within the CCP, President Xi Jinping is focused on making himself ruler for life, eliminating term limits, eliminating his rivals, consolidating his power.
So you have an inherently low-legitimacy government with governance reforms now going the wrong way, and economic growth may also be peaking. So it’s a good time for the regime to build support through flag-waving, appealing to national pride, playing to the idea of the Chinese nation being restored to its rightful glory.