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Taiwan–United States relations

After the United States established diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC) in 1979 and recognized Beijing as the only legal government of China, Taiwan–United States relations became unofficial and informal following terms of the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA), which allows the United States to have relations with the Taiwanese people and their government, whose name is not specified.[1][2][3] U.S.–Taiwan relations were further informally grounded in the "Six Assurances" in response to the third communiqué on the establishment of US–PRC relations. The Taiwan Travel Act, passed by the U.S. Congress on March 16, 2018, allows high-level U.S. officials to visit Taiwan and vice versa.[4] Both sides have since signed a consular agreement formalizing their existent consular relations on September 13, 2019.[5] The US government removed self-imposed restrictions on executive branch contacts with Taiwan on January 9, 2021.[6]

Taiwan – United States relations
ROC Defense Mission to the United States.
Traditional Chinese臺灣與美國關係
Simplified Chinese台湾与美国关系
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTáiwān yǔ měiguó guānxì
Bopomofoㄊㄞˊ ㄨㄢ ㄩˇ ㄇㄟˇ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄍㄨㄢ ㄒㄧˋ
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingToi4 waan1 jyu5 mei5 gwok3 gwaan1 hai6
Republic of China - United States relations
Traditional Chinese中華民國與美國關係
Simplified Chinese中华民国与美国关系
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōnghuá mínguó yǔ měiguó guānxì
Bopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄏㄨㄚˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄩˇ ㄇㄟˇ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄍㄨㄢ ㄒㄧˋ
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingZung1 waa4 man4 gwok3 jyu5 mei5 gwok3 gwaan1 hai6

Over the past four decades, the U.S. government's policy of deliberate ambiguity toward Taiwan has been viewed as critical to stabilizing cross-strait relations by seeking to deter the PRC from using force toward the region and dissuade Taiwan from seeking independence.[7][8] However, in recent years as Beijing escalated its moves and further clarified its intentions, the effectiveness of strategic ambiguity became a topic of debate in the academic and policy communities.[9][10][11][12][13][14] In 2021 and 2022, U.S. President Joe Biden made various forceful comments about coming to Taiwan's military defense in the event of a PRC invasion, indicating what scholars called a potential shift to "strategic clarity,"[15][16] while the State Department reiterated that the administration's Taiwan policy remained unchanged.[17][18][19][20]

As stipulated by the TRA, the United States remains the main provider of arms to Taiwan, which has often been a source of tension with the PRC.[21] Both states maintain representative offices functioning as de facto embassies. Taiwan is represented by the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States (TECRO),[22] while the U.S. government is represented by the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT).[23]

History edit

Background edit

In 1784, the United States attempted to send a consul to China but this was rejected by the Chinese government, with official relations beginning on June 16, 1844, under President John Tyler,[24] leading to the 1845 Treaty of Wangxia.

 
United States Consulate in Taihoku, Formosa

Two American diplomats in the 1850s suggested to Washington that the U.S. should obtain the island of Taiwan from China, but the idea was rejected.[25][26] Aboriginals on Taiwan often attacked and massacred shipwrecked western sailors, and American diplomats tried to help them.[27] In 1867, during the Rover incident, Taiwanese aborigines attacked shipwrecked American sailors, killing the entire crew. They subsequently skirmished against and defeated a retaliatory expedition by the American military and killed another American during the battle.[28]

Prior to the annexation of Hawaii, the Revive China Society, a predecessor to the Kuomintang (KMT) was founded in 1894 in Honolulu in opposition to the Qing.

As Taiwan was under Japanese control, following the Xinhai Revolution in 1911, which overthrew the Qing dynasty, the William Taft administration recognized the government of the Republic of China (ROC) as the sole and legitimate government of China despite a number of governments ruling various parts of China. China was reunified by a single government, led by the Kuomintang (KMT) in 1928, which subsequently gained recognition as China's only legitimate government despite continued internal strife. The first winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature for writing about China was an American, born in the United States but raised in China, Pearl S. Buck, whose 1938 Nobel lecture was titled The Chinese Novel.[29]

In the Japanese era, the United States also hosted a consulate in Taihoku, Formosa (today Taipei) from 1913. The consulate was closed in 1941 due to United States declaration of war on Japan. The site is now protected as the Former American Consulate in Taipei.[citation needed]

During the Pacific War, the United States and the Republic of China were allied against Japan. In October 1945, a month after Japan's surrender, representatives of Chiang Kai-shek, on behalf of the Allies, were sent to Formosa to accept the surrender of Japanese troops. However, during the period of the 1940s, there was no recognition by the United States Government that Taiwan had ever been incorporated into Chinese national territory.[30] Chiang continued to remain suspicious of America's motives.[31]

WWII-democratization edit

Two major US military units in Taiwan during the Cold War.
 
Eisenhower, Soong Mei-ling, and Chinese president Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan. 1960.
 
Number of U.S. Troops Stationed in Taiwan (1950–1979)

As the Korean War broke out, the Truman administration resumed economic and military aid to the ROC on Taiwan and neutralized the Taiwan Strait by United States Seventh Fleet to stop a Communist invasion of Formosa[32] (as well as a potential ROC counter-invasion of the mainland).[33] US military presence in Taiwan consisted of the Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) and the United States Taiwan Defense Command (USTDC). Other notable units included the 327th Air Division. Until the US formally recognized the People's Republic of China in 1979, Washington provided ROC with financial grants based on the Foreign Assistance Act,[34] Mutual Security Act and Act for International Development enacted by the US Congress. A separate Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty was signed between the two governments of US and ROC in 1954 and lasted until 1979.

The U.S. State Department's official position in 1959 was:

That the provisional capital of the Republic of China has been at Taipei, Taiwan (Formosa) since December 1949; that the Government of the Republic of China exercises authority over the island; that the sovereignty of Formosa has not been transferred to China; and that Formosa is not a part of China as a country, at least not as yet, and not until and unless appropriate treaties are hereafter entered into. Formosa may be said to be a territory or an area occupied and administered by the Government of the Republic of China, but is not officially recognized as being a part of the Republic of China.

— U.S. State Department, 1959, [35]
 
Taiwan representative office in Washington, D.C., United States

During the early Cold War the United States deployed nuclear weapons on Taiwan as part of the United States Taiwan Defense Command. In 1972, United States president Richard Nixon ordered nuclear weapons to be removed from Taiwan and this was implemented by 1974.[36]

At the height of the Sino-Soviet Split, and at the start of the reform and opening of People's Republic of China, the United States strategically switched diplomatic recognition from the Republic of China (ROC) to the People's Republic of China (PRC) on January 1, 1979, to counter the political influences and military threats from the Soviet Union. The US Embassy in Taipei was 'migrated' to Beijing and the Taiwanese Embassy in the US was closed. Following the termination of diplomatic relations, the United States terminated its Mutual Defense Treaty with Taiwan on January 1, 1980.

On April 10, 1979, U.S. President Jimmy Carter signed into law the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA), which created domestic legal authority for the conduct of unofficial relations with Taiwan. U.S. commercial, cultural, and other interaction with the people on Taiwan is facilitated through the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT), a private nonprofit corporation. The institute has its headquarters in the Washington, DC area and has offices in Taipei and Kaohsiung. It is authorized to issue visas, accept passport applications, and provide assistance to U.S. citizens in Taiwan. A counterpart organization, the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States (TECRO), has been established by Taiwan. It has its headquarters in Taipei, the representative branch office in Washington, DC, and 11 other Taipei Economic and Cultural Offices (TECO) in the continental U.S. and Guam. The Taiwan Relations Act (TRA) continues to provide the legal basis for the unofficial relationship between the U.S. and Taiwan, and enshrines the U.S. commitment to assisting Taiwan maintain its defensive capability.

After de-recognition, the U.S. still maintains unofficial diplomatic relations with Taiwan through Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office; the current head of TECRO in Washington, D.C. is Stanley Kao. The American Institute in Taiwan, a non-profit institute headquarters in the US soil under the laws of the District of Columbia in Arlington County, Virginia and serves as the semi-official, working-level US representation and AIT has branch offices in Taipei and Kaohsiung. The Chairman of AIT is Raymond Burghardt. Christopher J. Marut was appointed to be the new AIT Taipei Office Director in August 2012.[37][38] With the absence of diplomatic recognition, in the present state, Taiwan-US relations are formally guided by the service of enactment of Taiwan Relations Act by US Congress for the continuation of Taiwan-US relations after 1979.

Taiwan helped Ronald Reagan circumvent the Boland Amendment by providing covert support to the Contras in Nicaragua.[39]

Reagan pressured Taiwan into giving up its Sky Horse ballistic missile program.[40]

Taiwan's secret nuclear weapons program was revealed after the 1987 Lieyu massacre,[41][42] when Colonel Chang Hsien-yi Deputy Director of Nuclear Research at INER,[43] who was secretly working for the CIA, defected to the U.S. in December 1987 and produced a cache of incriminating documents.[44] The CIA oversaw negotiations with the Taiwanese which led them to abandon their nuclear ambitions in return for security guarantees.[40] Since the end of the nuclear weapons program the "Nuclear Card" has played an important part in Taiwan's relationship with the United States.[45]

Post-democratization edit

In 1997 the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich, traveled to Taiwan and met with President Lee Teng-hui.[46]

In 1999 former President Jimmy Carter visited Taiwan.[47]

In July 2002, Minister of Justice Chen Ding-nan (陳定南) became the first Taiwanese government official to be invited into the White House since 1979.

The Taiwan Policy Act of 2013 was raised and passed in the House Committee on Foreign Affairs by the US Congress to update the conditions of US-Taiwan relations.[48][49] In 2015 Kin Moy was appointed to the Director of the AIT.

 
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Taiwan's special envoy to the APEC summit, Lien Chan, November 2011

U.S. commercial ties with Taiwan have been maintained and have expanded since 1979. Taiwan continues to enjoy Export-Import Bank financing, Overseas Private Investment Corporation guarantees, normal trade relations (NTR) status, and ready access to U.S. markets.[50] In recent years, AIT commercial dealings with Taiwan have focused on expanding market access for American goods and services. AIT has been engaged in a series of trade discussions, which have focused on copyright concerns and market access for U.S. goods and services.

On December 16, 2015, the Obama administration announced a deal to sell $1.83 billion worth of arms to the Armed Forces of Taiwan, a year and eight months after U.S. House passed the Taiwan Relations Act Affirmation and Naval Vessel Transfer Act of 2014 to allow the sale of Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates to Taiwan. The deal would include the sale of two decommissioned U.S. Navy frigates, anti-tank missiles, Assault Amphibious Vehicles, and FIM-92 Stinger surface-to-air missiles, amid the territorial disputes in the South China Sea.[51][52] China's foreign ministry had expressed its disapproval for the sales and issued the U.S. a "stern warning", saying it would hurt China–U.S. relations.[53]

A new $250 million compound for the American Institute in Taiwan was unveiled in June 2018, accompanied by a "low-key" American delegation.[54] The Chinese authorities estimated this action as violation of "one China" policy statement and claimed the US to stop any relations with Taiwan.[55]

In September 2018, the United States approved the sale of $330 million worth of spare parts and other equipment to sustain the Republic of China Air Force.[56][57]

In July 2019, the US State Department approved the sale of M1A2T Abrams tanks, Stinger missiles and related equipment at an approximate value of $2.2 billion to Taiwan.[58]

In May 2020, the US State Department approved a possible Foreign Military Sale of 18 MK-48 Mod 6 Advanced Technology Heavy Weight Torpedoes for Taiwan in a deal estimated to cost $180 million.[59]

On 9 August 2020, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar visited Taiwan to meet President Tsai Ing-wen, the first visit by an American official since the break in diplomatic relations between Washington and Taipei in 1979.[60] In September 2020, U.S. Under Secretary of State for Economic Growth, Energy, and the Environment Keith J. Krach attended the memorial service for former Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui.[61]

In September 2020, the US Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft met with James K.J. Lee, director-general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New York, who was secretary-general in Taiwan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs until July, for lunch in New York City in what was the first meeting between a top Taiwan official and a United States ambassador to the United Nations.[62] Craft said she and Lee discussed ways the US can help Taiwan become more engaged within the U.N., and she pointed to a December 2019 email alert from Taiwan that WHO had ignored, recognizing and warning about the danger of the person-to-person transmission of the new highly contagious Covid-19 virus in China.[62]

In an October 2020 deal of $2.37 billion between the U.S. and Taiwan, the U.S. State Department approved the potential sale to Taiwan of 400 Harpoon anti-ship cruise missiles including associated radars, road-mobile launchers, and technical support.[63]

In January 2021, Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen met with United States Ambassador to the UN Kelly Craft by video link.[64] Craft said: "We discussed the many ways Taiwan is a model for the world, as demonstrated by its success in fighting COVID-19 and all that Taiwan has to offer in the fields of health, technology and cutting-edge science.... the U.S. stands with Taiwan and always will."[64] Speaking in Beijing, Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Zhao Lijian said: "Certain U.S. politicians will pay a heavy price for their wrong words and deeds."[65] On her last day in office later that month, Craft called Taiwan "a force for good on the global stage -- a vibrant democracy, a generous humanitarian actor, a responsible actor in the global health community, and a vigorous promoter and defender of human rights."[66]

In June 2021 a congressional delegation made up of Tammy Duckworth, Dan Sullivan and Christopher Coons briefly visited Taiwan and met with President Tsai Ing-wen. Their use of a C-17 military cargo aircraft drew strong protest from China.[67]

On March 3, 2021, the Biden administration reasserted the strength of the relationship between the U.S. and Taiwan in the administration's Interim National Security Strategic Guidance.[68] On March 8, 2021, the Biden administration made the following statement during a press briefing: "We will stand with friends and allies to advance our shared prosperity, security, and values in the Indo-Pacific region.  We maintain our longstanding commitments, as outlined in the Three Communiqués, the Taiwan Relations Act, and the Six Assurances.  And we will continue to assist Taiwan in maintaining a sufficient self-defense capability."[69]

On May 23, 2022, President Biden, during his trip to Asia, vowed to defend Taiwan with US military in the case of an invasion by China.[70] At the end of May Illinois Senator Tammy Duckworth led a congressional delegation to Taiwan.[71]

In late May 2022, the State Department restored a line on its fact sheet on US-Taiwan relations which it removed earlier in the month and stated it did not support Taiwanese independence. However,[72] another line which was also removed in the earlier fact sheet that acknowledged China's sovereignty claims over Taiwan was not restored while a line that stated the U.S. would maintain its capacity to resist any efforts by China to undermine the security, sovereignty and prosperity of Taiwan in a manner that was consistent with the Taiwan Relations Act was added to the updated fact sheet.

In July 2022 Senator Rick Scott led a congressional delegation to Taiwan.[73]

On August 2, 2022, Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives led a congressional delegation to Taiwan, leading to a military and economic response from China.[74] Later in August a congressional delegation led by Massachusetts Senator Ed Markey also visited Taiwan[75] and Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb (who became the first Indiana Governor to visit Taiwan since 2005).[76] In late August 2022 Tennessee Senator Marsha Blackburn visited Taiwan.[77] In late August 2022 then Arizona Governor Doug Ducey arrived in Taiwan for a visit focused on semiconductors.[78]

In February 2023, Representatives Ro Khanna, Jake Auchincloss, Jonathan Jackson and Tony Gonzales visited Taiwan.[47]

In March and April 2023, Tsai Ing-wen, President of Taiwan, traveled to the United States. In March, she met in New York City with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and a bipartisan group of U.S. Senators: Joni Ernst of Iowa, Mark Kelly of Arizona, and Dan Sullivan of Alaska.[79]

On April 5, 2023, Tsai met with Kevin McCarthy, the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California and a bipartisan delegation of House members. The meeting between Tsai and McCarthy marked the first time a Taiwanese President had met with a US House Speaker on American soil and the second time in less than a year that a Taiwanese President had met with a US House Speaker (having met Pelosi in August 2022 in Taiwan).[79]

In June 2023 a US congressional delegation comprising nine representatives headed by Mike Rogers visited Taiwan.[80]

In September 2023 the Biden administration redirected military aid funding which had been appropriated to Egypt to Taiwan and Lebanon in response to a deteriorating human rights situation in Egypt.[81]

In October 2023, Taiwan's vice defense minister Hsu Yen-pu urged the US to accelerate arms delivery at the US-Taiwan Defense Industry Conference in Virginia, a key exchange venue for top US and Taiwan defense officials that had been hosted annually since 2012.[82][83][84]

In November 2023 the US state of North Carolina opened an investment office in Taipei.[85]

Notable events edit

In 1949, when Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's troops decamped to Taiwan at the end of the Chinese civil war, Washington continued to recognize Chiang's "Republic of China" as the government of all China. In late 1978, Washington announced that it would break relations with the government in Taipei and formally recognize the People's Republic of China (PRC) as the "sole legal government of China."[86]

 
Taiwan welcomes U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1960

Washington's "one China" policy, however, does not mean that the United States recognizes or agrees with Beijing's claims to sovereignty over Taiwan.[86][87] On July 14, 1982, the Republican Reagan administration gave specific assurances to Taiwan that the United States did not accept China's claim to sovereignty over the island (Six Assurances),[86][88] and the U.S. Department of State informed the Senate that "[t]he United States takes no position on the question of Taiwan's sovereignty."

The U.S. Department of State, in its U.S. Relations With Taiwan fact sheet, states "[T]he United States and Taiwan enjoy a robust unofficial relationship. The 1979 U.S.–P.R.C. Joint Communiqué switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing. In the Joint Communiqué, the United States recognized the Government of the People's Republic of China as the sole legal government of China, acknowledging the Chinese position that there is but one China and Taiwan is part of China.[89]

The United States position on Taiwan is reflected in "the six assurances to Taiwan", the Three Communiqués, and the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA).[90] The Six Assurances include: 1. The United States has not agreed to set a date for ending arms sales to Taiwan; 2. The United States has not agreed to hold prior consultations with the Chinese on arms sales to Taiwan; 3. The United States would not play any mediation role between Taiwan and Beijing; 4. The United States has not agreed to revise the Taiwan Relations Act; 5. The United States has not altered its position regarding sovereignty over Taiwan; and 6. The United States would not exert pressure on Taiwan to enter into negotiations with the Chinese.[91] The "Three Communiqués" include The Shanghai Communiqué, The Normalisation Communiqué, and The August 17 Communiqué, which pledged to abrogate official US-ROC relations, remove US troops from Taiwan and gradually end the arms sale to Taiwan, but with the latter of no timeline to do so, an effort made by James Lilley, the Director of American Institute in Taiwan.

 
President John F. Kennedy and Vice President Lyndon Johnson meet with Chen Cheng, Vice President of the Republic of China, 31 July 1961

President Bush was asked on 25 April 2001, "if Taiwan were attacked by China, do we (The U.S.) have an obligation to defend the Taiwanese?" He responded, "Yes, we do...and the Chinese must understand that. The United States would do whatever it took to help Taiwan defend herself."[92] He made it understood that "though we (China and the U.S.) have common interests, the Chinese must understand that there will be some areas where we disagree."[92] On the advice of his advisors, Bush later made clear to the press that there was no change in American policy.[93]

 
Then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Ash Carter greets Taiwan representative to the U.S. Jason Yuan and Vice Minister of Defense Andrew Yang before a meeting at The Pentagon on October 2, 2012

On 19 June 2013, ROC Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed gratitude for a US Congress's bill in support of Taiwan's bid to participate in the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).[94] On July 12, 2013, US President Barack Obama signed into law H.R. 1151, codifying the US government's full support for Taiwan's participation in the ICAO as a non-sovereign entity.[95] The United States has continued the sale of appropriate defensive military equipment to Taiwan in accordance with the Taiwan Relations Act, which provides for such sales and which declares that peace and stability in the area are in U.S. interests. Sales of defensive military equipment are also consistent with the 1982 U.S.-P.R.C. Joint Communiqué.

Maintaining diplomatic relations with the PRC has been recognized to be in the long-term interest of the United States by seven consecutive administrations; however, maintaining strong, unofficial relations with Taiwan is also a major U.S. goal, in line with its desire to further peace and stability in Asia. In keeping with its China policy, the U.S. does not support de jure Taiwan independence, but it does support Taiwan's membership in appropriate international organizations, such as the World Trade Organization, Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, and the Asian Development Bank, where statehood is not a requirement for membership. In addition, the U.S. supports appropriate opportunities for Taiwan's voice to be heard in organizations where its membership is not possible.

On 24 August 2010, the United States State Department announced a change to commercial sales of military equipment in place of the previous foreign military sales in the hope of avoiding political implications.[96] However pressure from the PRC has continued and it seems unlikely that Taiwan will be provided with advanced submarines or jet fighters.[97]

Taiwan has indicated that it is willing to host national missile defense radars to be tied into the American system, but is unwilling to pay for any further cost overruns in the systems.[98]

 
Tsai Ing-wen (center), President of the Republic of China (Taiwan), accompanied by Secretary-General of National Security Council Joseph Wu (left) and Foreign Minister David Lee (right), made a phone call to Donald Trump, President-elect of the United States, on December 2, 2016.

On December 2, 2016, U.S. President-Elect Donald Trump accepted a congratulatory call from Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-Wen, which was the first time since 1979 that a President-Elect has publicly spoken to a leader of Taiwan.[99] Donald Trump stated the call was regarding "the close economic, political and security ties between Taiwan and the US".[100] The phone call had been arranged by Bob Dole, who acted as a foreign agent on behalf of Taiwan.[101]

In June 2017, the Trump administration approved $1.4 billion arms sales to Taiwan.[102]

On 16 March 2018, President Trump signed the Taiwan Travel Act,[103] allowing high-level diplomatic engagement between Taiwanese and American officials, and encourages visits between government officials of the United States and Taiwan at all levels.[104][105] The legislation has sparked outrage from the PRC,[106] and has been applauded by Taiwan.[107][104]

On 17 July 2018, Taiwan's Army officially commissioned all of its Apache attack helicopters purchased from the United States, at cost of $59.31 billion NT(US$1.94 billion), having completed the necessary pilot training and verification of the fleet's combat capability. One of the helicopters was destroyed in a crash during a training flight in Taoyuan in April 2014 and the other 29 have been allocated to the command's 601st Brigade, which is based in Longtan, Taoyuan. Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen said the commissioning of the Apaches was "an important milestone" in meeting the island's "multiple deterrence" strategy to counter an invasion and to resist Beijing's pressure with support from Washington, which has been concerned about Beijing's growing military expansion in the South China Sea and beyond.[108]

On 26 March 2020, President Trump signed the TAIPEI Act, aiming to increase the scope of US relations with Taiwan and encouraging other nations and international organizations to strengthen their official and unofficial ties with the island nation.[109]

In late October 2021, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on all United Nations member states to support Taiwan's participation in the U.N. system. The comments came a day after the 50th anniversary of U.N. Resolution 2758, in which the People's Republic of China was designated as the representative of China at the U.N., while the Republic of China (R.O.C.) was expelled.[110][111]

In December 2021, the U.S. invited Taiwan to the Summit for Democracy.[112]

On December 15, 2021, the US House of Representative and Senate have both passed the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022, in which calls for the enhancements of the security of Taiwan, including inviting the Taiwanese navy to the 2022 Rim of the Pacific exercise in the face of "increasingly coercive and aggressive behavior" by China.[113][114] President Joe Biden signed the act on December 27, 2021.[115]

 
U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris with Vice President of Taiwan Lai Ching-te at the presidential inauguration of Xiomara Castro of Honduras in January 2022

On 27 January 2022, U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and Vice President of Taiwan Lai Ching-te had a brief conversation during the presidential inauguration ceremony of Xiomara Castro of Honduras.[116]

On July 28, 2022, U.S. President Joe Biden had a phone call with Chinese President Xi Jinping, during which he "underscored that the United States policy has not changed and that the United States strongly opposes unilateral efforts to change the status quo or undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait."[117]

On May 18, 2023, the USTR announced that the US and Taiwan, "under the auspices of the American Institute in Taiwan and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in the US, have concluded negotiations on the U.S.-Taiwan Initiative on 21st Century Trade."[118][119]

On June 29, 2023, the State Department approved $440 million in arms sales to Taiwan, pending final approval by Congress.[120] Beijing opposed the move,[121] AIT Chair Laura Rosenberger later stated that the US' "interest in peace and stability across the Strait and our commitments to supporting Taiwan's self-defense capacity are things we will continue to uphold, any complaints from Beijing are not going to change that approach."[122]

On July 28, 2023, the Biden administration formally announced a $345 million military assistance package to Taiwan.[123][124] Both China and North Korea denounced the move.[125][126]

Consular representation edit

The United States operates a de facto embassy in Taipei called the American Institute in Taiwan. It also operates a de facto consulate in Kaohsiung called the American Institute in Taiwan Kaohsiung Branch Office.

Taiwan operates several diplomatic missions in the United States, with the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States located in Washington, D.C. This mission is also accredited to Cuba, the Bahamas, Grenada, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, and Trinidad and Tobago, despite Taiwan not having official relations with them. Other than the mission in Washington, Taiwan also operates representative offices in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Honolulu, Houston, Miami, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Guam, and Denver.[127]

See also edit

References edit

  This article incorporates public domain material from U.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets. United States Department of State.

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Further reading edit

  • Benson, Brett V., and Emerson MS Niou. "Public opinion, foreign policy, and the security balance in the Taiwan Strait." Security Studies 14.2 (2005): 274–289.
  • Bush, Richard C. At cross purposes: US-Taiwan relations since 1942 (Routledge, 2015).
  • Carpenter, Ted Galen. America's coming war with China: a collision course over Taiwan (Macmillan, 2015).
  • Glaser, Charles L. "A US-China grand bargain? The hard choice between military competition and accommodation." International Security 39#4 (2015): 49–90.
  • Hickey, Dennis Van Vranken. "America's Two-point Policy and the Future of Taiwan." Asian Survey (1988): 881–896. in JSTOR
  • Hickey, Dennis V. "Parallel Progress: US-Taiwan Relations During an Era of Cross-Strait Rapprochement." Journal of Chinese Political Science 20#4 (2015): 369–384.
  • Hu, Shaohua. "A Framework for Analysis of National Interest: United States Policy toward Taiwan," Contemporary Security Policy, Vol. 37, No. 1 (April 2016): 144–167.
  • Kim, Claudia J. (2019) "Military alliances as a stabilising force: U.S. relations with South Korea and Taiwan, 1950s-1960s." Journal of Strategic Studies
  • Liao, Nien-chung Chang, and Dalton Kuen-da Lin. "Rebalancing Taiwan–US Relations." Survival 57#6 (2015): 145–158. online
  • Ling, Lily HM, Ching-Chane Hwang, and Boyu Chen. "Subaltern straits:‘exit’,‘voice’, and ‘loyalty’in the United States–China–Taiwan relations." International Relations of the Asia-Pacific (2009): lcp013.
  • Matray, James I. ed. East Asia and the United States: An Encyclopedia of relations since 1784 (2 vol. Greenwood, 2002). excerpt v 2
  • Peraino, Kevin. A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949 (2017), focus on .S. policy in 1949
  • Sutter, Robert. "US Domestic Debate Over Policy Toward Mainland China and Taiwan: Key Findings, Outlook and Lessons." American Journal of Chinese Studies (2001): 133–144.

External links edit

  • Taiwan-US Relations March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives January 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Mandatory Guidance from Department of State Regarding Contact with Taiwan
  • U.S. Relations With Taiwan
  • from the
  • Stating America's Case to China's Hu Jintao: A Primer on U.S.-China-Taiwan Policy

taiwan, united, states, relations, this, article, about, relations, between, republic, china, united, states, relations, between, people, republic, china, united, states, after, 1979, china, united, states, relations, relations, from, before, history, china, u. This article is about relations between the Republic of China and the United States For relations between the People s Republic of China and the United States after 1979 see China United States relations For relations from before see History of China United States relations to 1948 After the United States established diplomatic relations with the People s Republic of China PRC in 1979 and recognized Beijing as the only legal government of China Taiwan United States relations became unofficial and informal following terms of the Taiwan Relations Act TRA which allows the United States to have relations with the Taiwanese people and their government whose name is not specified 1 2 3 U S Taiwan relations were further informally grounded in the Six Assurances in response to the third communique on the establishment of US PRC relations The Taiwan Travel Act passed by the U S Congress on March 16 2018 allows high level U S officials to visit Taiwan and vice versa 4 Both sides have since signed a consular agreement formalizing their existent consular relations on September 13 2019 5 The US government removed self imposed restrictions on executive branch contacts with Taiwan on January 9 2021 6 American Taiwanese relationsTaiwan United StatesDiplomatic missionTaipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United StatesAmerican Institute in TaiwanEnvoyRepresentative Alexander YuiChair Laura RosenbergerTaiwan United States relationsROC Defense Mission to the United States Traditional Chinese臺灣與美國關係Simplified Chinese台湾与美国关系TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinTaiwan yǔ meiguo guanxiBopomofoㄊㄞˊ ㄨㄢ ㄩˇ ㄇㄟˇ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄍㄨㄢ ㄒㄧˋYue CantoneseJyutpingToi4 waan1 jyu5 mei5 gwok3 gwaan1 hai6Republic of China United States relationsTraditional Chinese中華民國與美國關係Simplified Chinese中华民国与美国关系TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhōnghua minguo yǔ meiguo guanxiBopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄏㄨㄚˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄩˇ ㄇㄟˇ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄍㄨㄢ ㄒㄧˋYue CantoneseJyutpingZung1 waa4 man4 gwok3 jyu5 mei5 gwok3 gwaan1 hai6Over the past four decades the U S government s policy of deliberate ambiguity toward Taiwan has been viewed as critical to stabilizing cross strait relations by seeking to deter the PRC from using force toward the region and dissuade Taiwan from seeking independence 7 8 However in recent years as Beijing escalated its moves and further clarified its intentions the effectiveness of strategic ambiguity became a topic of debate in the academic and policy communities 9 10 11 12 13 14 In 2021 and 2022 U S President Joe Biden made various forceful comments about coming to Taiwan s military defense in the event of a PRC invasion indicating what scholars called a potential shift to strategic clarity 15 16 while the State Department reiterated that the administration s Taiwan policy remained unchanged 17 18 19 20 As stipulated by the TRA the United States remains the main provider of arms to Taiwan which has often been a source of tension with the PRC 21 Both states maintain representative offices functioning as de facto embassies Taiwan is represented by the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States TECRO 22 while the U S government is represented by the American Institute in Taiwan AIT 23 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 WWII democratization 1 3 Post democratization 2 Notable events 3 Consular representation 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editBackground edit In 1784 the United States attempted to send a consul to China but this was rejected by the Chinese government with official relations beginning on June 16 1844 under President John Tyler 24 leading to the 1845 Treaty of Wangxia nbsp United States Consulate in Taihoku FormosaTwo American diplomats in the 1850s suggested to Washington that the U S should obtain the island of Taiwan from China but the idea was rejected 25 26 Aboriginals on Taiwan often attacked and massacred shipwrecked western sailors and American diplomats tried to help them 27 In 1867 during the Rover incident Taiwanese aborigines attacked shipwrecked American sailors killing the entire crew They subsequently skirmished against and defeated a retaliatory expedition by the American military and killed another American during the battle 28 Prior to the annexation of Hawaii the Revive China Society a predecessor to the Kuomintang KMT was founded in 1894 in Honolulu in opposition to the Qing As Taiwan was under Japanese control following the Xinhai Revolution in 1911 which overthrew the Qing dynasty the William Taft administration recognized the government of the Republic of China ROC as the sole and legitimate government of China despite a number of governments ruling various parts of China China was reunified by a single government led by the Kuomintang KMT in 1928 which subsequently gained recognition as China s only legitimate government despite continued internal strife The first winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature for writing about China was an American born in the United States but raised in China Pearl S Buck whose 1938 Nobel lecture was titled The Chinese Novel 29 In the Japanese era the United States also hosted a consulate in Taihoku Formosa today Taipei from 1913 The consulate was closed in 1941 due to United States declaration of war on Japan The site is now protected as the Former American Consulate in Taipei citation needed During the Pacific War the United States and the Republic of China were allied against Japan In October 1945 a month after Japan s surrender representatives of Chiang Kai shek on behalf of the Allies were sent to Formosa to accept the surrender of Japanese troops However during the period of the 1940s there was no recognition by the United States Government that Taiwan had ever been incorporated into Chinese national territory 30 Chiang continued to remain suspicious of America s motives 31 WWII democratization edit See also China United States relations Main article Retreat of the Republic of China to Taiwan nbsp Badge of the Military Assistance Advisory Group MAAG nbsp Badge of the United States Taiwan Defense Command USTDC Two major US military units in Taiwan during the Cold War nbsp Eisenhower Soong Mei ling and Chinese president Chiang Kai shek in Taiwan 1960 nbsp Number of U S Troops Stationed in Taiwan 1950 1979 As the Korean War broke out the Truman administration resumed economic and military aid to the ROC on Taiwan and neutralized the Taiwan Strait by United States Seventh Fleet to stop a Communist invasion of Formosa 32 as well as a potential ROC counter invasion of the mainland 33 US military presence in Taiwan consisted of the Military Assistance Advisory Group MAAG and the United States Taiwan Defense Command USTDC Other notable units included the 327th Air Division Until the US formally recognized the People s Republic of China in 1979 Washington provided ROC with financial grants based on the Foreign Assistance Act 34 Mutual Security Act and Act for International Development enacted by the US Congress A separate Sino American Mutual Defense Treaty was signed between the two governments of US and ROC in 1954 and lasted until 1979 The U S State Department s official position in 1959 was That the provisional capital of the Republic of China has been at Taipei Taiwan Formosa since December 1949 that the Government of the Republic of China exercises authority over the island that the sovereignty of Formosa has not been transferred to China and that Formosa is not a part of China as a country at least not as yet and not until and unless appropriate treaties are hereafter entered into Formosa may be said to be a territory or an area occupied and administered by the Government of the Republic of China but is not officially recognized as being a part of the Republic of China U S State Department 1959 35 nbsp Taiwan representative office in Washington D C United StatesDuring the early Cold War the United States deployed nuclear weapons on Taiwan as part of the United States Taiwan Defense Command In 1972 United States president Richard Nixon ordered nuclear weapons to be removed from Taiwan and this was implemented by 1974 36 At the height of the Sino Soviet Split and at the start of the reform and opening of People s Republic of China the United States strategically switched diplomatic recognition from the Republic of China ROC to the People s Republic of China PRC on January 1 1979 to counter the political influences and military threats from the Soviet Union The US Embassy in Taipei was migrated to Beijing and the Taiwanese Embassy in the US was closed Following the termination of diplomatic relations the United States terminated its Mutual Defense Treaty with Taiwan on January 1 1980 On April 10 1979 U S President Jimmy Carter signed into law the Taiwan Relations Act TRA which created domestic legal authority for the conduct of unofficial relations with Taiwan U S commercial cultural and other interaction with the people on Taiwan is facilitated through the American Institute in Taiwan AIT a private nonprofit corporation The institute has its headquarters in the Washington DC area and has offices in Taipei and Kaohsiung It is authorized to issue visas accept passport applications and provide assistance to U S citizens in Taiwan A counterpart organization the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States TECRO has been established by Taiwan It has its headquarters in Taipei the representative branch office in Washington DC and 11 other Taipei Economic and Cultural Offices TECO in the continental U S and Guam The Taiwan Relations Act TRA continues to provide the legal basis for the unofficial relationship between the U S and Taiwan and enshrines the U S commitment to assisting Taiwan maintain its defensive capability After de recognition the U S still maintains unofficial diplomatic relations with Taiwan through Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office the current head of TECRO in Washington D C is Stanley Kao The American Institute in Taiwan a non profit institute headquarters in the US soil under the laws of the District of Columbia in Arlington County Virginia and serves as the semi official working level US representation and AIT has branch offices in Taipei and Kaohsiung The Chairman of AIT is Raymond Burghardt Christopher J Marut was appointed to be the new AIT Taipei Office Director in August 2012 37 38 With the absence of diplomatic recognition in the present state Taiwan US relations are formally guided by the service of enactment of Taiwan Relations Act by US Congress for the continuation of Taiwan US relations after 1979 Taiwan helped Ronald Reagan circumvent the Boland Amendment by providing covert support to the Contras in Nicaragua 39 Reagan pressured Taiwan into giving up its Sky Horse ballistic missile program 40 Taiwan s secret nuclear weapons program was revealed after the 1987 Lieyu massacre 41 42 when Colonel Chang Hsien yi Deputy Director of Nuclear Research at INER 43 who was secretly working for the CIA defected to the U S in December 1987 and produced a cache of incriminating documents 44 The CIA oversaw negotiations with the Taiwanese which led them to abandon their nuclear ambitions in return for security guarantees 40 Since the end of the nuclear weapons program the Nuclear Card has played an important part in Taiwan s relationship with the United States 45 Post democratization edit In 1997 the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Newt Gingrich traveled to Taiwan and met with President Lee Teng hui 46 In 1999 former President Jimmy Carter visited Taiwan 47 In July 2002 Minister of Justice Chen Ding nan 陳定南 became the first Taiwanese government official to be invited into the White House since 1979 The Taiwan Policy Act of 2013 was raised and passed in the House Committee on Foreign Affairs by the US Congress to update the conditions of US Taiwan relations 48 49 In 2015 Kin Moy was appointed to the Director of the AIT nbsp US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Taiwan s special envoy to the APEC summit Lien Chan November 2011U S commercial ties with Taiwan have been maintained and have expanded since 1979 Taiwan continues to enjoy Export Import Bank financing Overseas Private Investment Corporation guarantees normal trade relations NTR status and ready access to U S markets 50 In recent years AIT commercial dealings with Taiwan have focused on expanding market access for American goods and services AIT has been engaged in a series of trade discussions which have focused on copyright concerns and market access for U S goods and services On December 16 2015 the Obama administration announced a deal to sell 1 83 billion worth of arms to the Armed Forces of Taiwan a year and eight months after U S House passed the Taiwan Relations Act Affirmation and Naval Vessel Transfer Act of 2014 to allow the sale of Oliver Hazard Perry class frigates to Taiwan The deal would include the sale of two decommissioned U S Navy frigates anti tank missiles Assault Amphibious Vehicles and FIM 92 Stinger surface to air missiles amid the territorial disputes in the South China Sea 51 52 China s foreign ministry had expressed its disapproval for the sales and issued the U S a stern warning saying it would hurt China U S relations 53 A new 250 million compound for the American Institute in Taiwan was unveiled in June 2018 accompanied by a low key American delegation 54 The Chinese authorities estimated this action as violation of one China policy statement and claimed the US to stop any relations with Taiwan 55 In September 2018 the United States approved the sale of 330 million worth of spare parts and other equipment to sustain the Republic of China Air Force 56 57 In July 2019 the US State Department approved the sale of M1A2T Abrams tanks Stinger missiles and related equipment at an approximate value of 2 2 billion to Taiwan 58 In May 2020 the US State Department approved a possible Foreign Military Sale of 18 MK 48 Mod 6 Advanced Technology Heavy Weight Torpedoes for Taiwan in a deal estimated to cost 180 million 59 On 9 August 2020 U S Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar visited Taiwan to meet President Tsai Ing wen the first visit by an American official since the break in diplomatic relations between Washington and Taipei in 1979 60 In September 2020 U S Under Secretary of State for Economic Growth Energy and the Environment Keith J Krach attended the memorial service for former Taiwanese President Lee Teng hui 61 In September 2020 the US Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft met with James K J Lee director general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New York who was secretary general in Taiwan s Ministry of Foreign Affairs until July for lunch in New York City in what was the first meeting between a top Taiwan official and a United States ambassador to the United Nations 62 Craft said she and Lee discussed ways the US can help Taiwan become more engaged within the U N and she pointed to a December 2019 email alert from Taiwan that WHO had ignored recognizing and warning about the danger of the person to person transmission of the new highly contagious Covid 19 virus in China 62 In an October 2020 deal of 2 37 billion between the U S and Taiwan the U S State Department approved the potential sale to Taiwan of 400 Harpoon anti ship cruise missiles including associated radars road mobile launchers and technical support 63 In January 2021 Taiwan President Tsai Ing wen met with United States Ambassador to the UN Kelly Craft by video link 64 Craft said We discussed the many ways Taiwan is a model for the world as demonstrated by its success in fighting COVID 19 and all that Taiwan has to offer in the fields of health technology and cutting edge science the U S stands with Taiwan and always will 64 Speaking in Beijing Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Zhao Lijian said Certain U S politicians will pay a heavy price for their wrong words and deeds 65 On her last day in office later that month Craft called Taiwan a force for good on the global stage a vibrant democracy a generous humanitarian actor a responsible actor in the global health community and a vigorous promoter and defender of human rights 66 In June 2021 a congressional delegation made up of Tammy Duckworth Dan Sullivan and Christopher Coons briefly visited Taiwan and met with President Tsai Ing wen Their use of a C 17 military cargo aircraft drew strong protest from China 67 On March 3 2021 the Biden administration reasserted the strength of the relationship between the U S and Taiwan in the administration s Interim National Security Strategic Guidance 68 On March 8 2021 the Biden administration made the following statement during a press briefing We will stand with friends and allies to advance our shared prosperity security and values in the Indo Pacific region We maintain our longstanding commitments as outlined in the Three Communiques the Taiwan Relations Act and the Six Assurances And we will continue to assist Taiwan in maintaining a sufficient self defense capability 69 On May 23 2022 President Biden during his trip to Asia vowed to defend Taiwan with US military in the case of an invasion by China 70 At the end of May Illinois Senator Tammy Duckworth led a congressional delegation to Taiwan 71 In late May 2022 the State Department restored a line on its fact sheet on US Taiwan relations which it removed earlier in the month and stated it did not support Taiwanese independence However 72 another line which was also removed in the earlier fact sheet that acknowledged China s sovereignty claims over Taiwan was not restored while a line that stated the U S would maintain its capacity to resist any efforts by China to undermine the security sovereignty and prosperity of Taiwan in a manner that was consistent with the Taiwan Relations Act was added to the updated fact sheet In July 2022 Senator Rick Scott led a congressional delegation to Taiwan 73 On August 2 2022 Nancy Pelosi the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives led a congressional delegation to Taiwan leading to a military and economic response from China 74 Later in August a congressional delegation led by Massachusetts Senator Ed Markey also visited Taiwan 75 and Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb who became the first Indiana Governor to visit Taiwan since 2005 76 In late August 2022 Tennessee Senator Marsha Blackburn visited Taiwan 77 In late August 2022 then Arizona Governor Doug Ducey arrived in Taiwan for a visit focused on semiconductors 78 In February 2023 Representatives Ro Khanna Jake Auchincloss Jonathan Jackson and Tony Gonzales visited Taiwan 47 In March and April 2023 Tsai Ing wen President of Taiwan traveled to the United States In March she met in New York City with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and a bipartisan group of U S Senators Joni Ernst of Iowa Mark Kelly of Arizona and Dan Sullivan of Alaska 79 On April 5 2023 Tsai met with Kevin McCarthy the Speaker of the U S House of Representatives at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley California and a bipartisan delegation of House members The meeting between Tsai and McCarthy marked the first time a Taiwanese President had met with a US House Speaker on American soil and the second time in less than a year that a Taiwanese President had met with a US House Speaker having met Pelosi in August 2022 in Taiwan 79 In June 2023 a US congressional delegation comprising nine representatives headed by Mike Rogers visited Taiwan 80 In September 2023 the Biden administration redirected military aid funding which had been appropriated to Egypt to Taiwan and Lebanon in response to a deteriorating human rights situation in Egypt 81 In October 2023 Taiwan s vice defense minister Hsu Yen pu urged the US to accelerate arms delivery at the US Taiwan Defense Industry Conference in Virginia a key exchange venue for top US and Taiwan defense officials that had been hosted annually since 2012 82 83 84 In November 2023 the US state of North Carolina opened an investment office in Taipei 85 Notable events editIn 1949 when Generalissimo Chiang Kai shek s troops decamped to Taiwan at the end of the Chinese civil war Washington continued to recognize Chiang s Republic of China as the government of all China In late 1978 Washington announced that it would break relations with the government in Taipei and formally recognize the People s Republic of China PRC as the sole legal government of China 86 nbsp Taiwan welcomes U S President Dwight D Eisenhower in 1960Washington s one China policy however does not mean that the United States recognizes or agrees with Beijing s claims to sovereignty over Taiwan 86 87 On July 14 1982 the Republican Reagan administration gave specific assurances to Taiwan that the United States did not accept China s claim to sovereignty over the island Six Assurances 86 88 and the U S Department of State informed the Senate that t he United States takes no position on the question of Taiwan s sovereignty The U S Department of State in its U S Relations With Taiwan fact sheet states T he United States and Taiwan enjoy a robust unofficial relationship The 1979 U S P R C Joint Communique switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing In the Joint Communique the United States recognized the Government of the People s Republic of China as the sole legal government of China acknowledging the Chinese position that there is but one China and Taiwan is part of China 89 The United States position on Taiwan is reflected in the six assurances to Taiwan the Three Communiques and the Taiwan Relations Act TRA 90 The Six Assurances include 1 The United States has not agreed to set a date for ending arms sales to Taiwan 2 The United States has not agreed to hold prior consultations with the Chinese on arms sales to Taiwan 3 The United States would not play any mediation role between Taiwan and Beijing 4 The United States has not agreed to revise the Taiwan Relations Act 5 The United States has not altered its position regarding sovereignty over Taiwan and 6 The United States would not exert pressure on Taiwan to enter into negotiations with the Chinese 91 The Three Communiques include The Shanghai Communique The Normalisation Communique and The August 17 Communique which pledged to abrogate official US ROC relations remove US troops from Taiwan and gradually end the arms sale to Taiwan but with the latter of no timeline to do so an effort made by James Lilley the Director of American Institute in Taiwan nbsp President John F Kennedy and Vice President Lyndon Johnson meet with Chen Cheng Vice President of the Republic of China 31 July 1961President Bush was asked on 25 April 2001 if Taiwan were attacked by China do we The U S have an obligation to defend the Taiwanese He responded Yes we do and the Chinese must understand that The United States would do whatever it took to help Taiwan defend herself 92 He made it understood that though we China and the U S have common interests the Chinese must understand that there will be some areas where we disagree 92 On the advice of his advisors Bush later made clear to the press that there was no change in American policy 93 nbsp Then Deputy Secretary of Defense Ash Carter greets Taiwan representative to the U S Jason Yuan and Vice Minister of Defense Andrew Yang before a meeting at The Pentagon on October 2 2012On 19 June 2013 ROC Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed gratitude for a US Congress s bill in support of Taiwan s bid to participate in the International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO 94 On July 12 2013 US President Barack Obama signed into law H R 1151 codifying the US government s full support for Taiwan s participation in the ICAO as a non sovereign entity 95 The United States has continued the sale of appropriate defensive military equipment to Taiwan in accordance with the Taiwan Relations Act which provides for such sales and which declares that peace and stability in the area are in U S interests Sales of defensive military equipment are also consistent with the 1982 U S P R C Joint Communique Maintaining diplomatic relations with the PRC has been recognized to be in the long term interest of the United States by seven consecutive administrations however maintaining strong unofficial relations with Taiwan is also a major U S goal in line with its desire to further peace and stability in Asia In keeping with its China policy the U S does not support de jure Taiwan independence but it does support Taiwan s membership in appropriate international organizations such as the World Trade Organization Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation APEC forum and the Asian Development Bank where statehood is not a requirement for membership In addition the U S supports appropriate opportunities for Taiwan s voice to be heard in organizations where its membership is not possible On 24 August 2010 the United States State Department announced a change to commercial sales of military equipment in place of the previous foreign military sales in the hope of avoiding political implications 96 However pressure from the PRC has continued and it seems unlikely that Taiwan will be provided with advanced submarines or jet fighters 97 Taiwan has indicated that it is willing to host national missile defense radars to be tied into the American system but is unwilling to pay for any further cost overruns in the systems 98 nbsp Tsai Ing wen center President of the Republic of China Taiwan accompanied by Secretary General of National Security Council Joseph Wu left and Foreign Minister David Lee right made a phone call to Donald Trump President elect of the United States on December 2 2016 On December 2 2016 U S President Elect Donald Trump accepted a congratulatory call from Taiwanese President Tsai Ing Wen which was the first time since 1979 that a President Elect has publicly spoken to a leader of Taiwan 99 Donald Trump stated the call was regarding the close economic political and security ties between Taiwan and the US 100 The phone call had been arranged by Bob Dole who acted as a foreign agent on behalf of Taiwan 101 In June 2017 the Trump administration approved 1 4 billion arms sales to Taiwan 102 On 16 March 2018 President Trump signed the Taiwan Travel Act 103 allowing high level diplomatic engagement between Taiwanese and American officials and encourages visits between government officials of the United States and Taiwan at all levels 104 105 The legislation has sparked outrage from the PRC 106 and has been applauded by Taiwan 107 104 On 17 July 2018 Taiwan s Army officially commissioned all of its Apache attack helicopters purchased from the United States at cost of 59 31 billion NT US 1 94 billion having completed the necessary pilot training and verification of the fleet s combat capability One of the helicopters was destroyed in a crash during a training flight in Taoyuan in April 2014 and the other 29 have been allocated to the command s 601st Brigade which is based in Longtan Taoyuan Taiwanese President Tsai Ing wen said the commissioning of the Apaches was an important milestone in meeting the island s multiple deterrence strategy to counter an invasion and to resist Beijing s pressure with support from Washington which has been concerned about Beijing s growing military expansion in the South China Sea and beyond 108 On 26 March 2020 President Trump signed the TAIPEI Act aiming to increase the scope of US relations with Taiwan and encouraging other nations and international organizations to strengthen their official and unofficial ties with the island nation 109 In late October 2021 U S Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on all United Nations member states to support Taiwan s participation in the U N system The comments came a day after the 50th anniversary of U N Resolution 2758 in which the People s Republic of China was designated as the representative of China at the U N while the Republic of China R O C was expelled 110 111 In December 2021 the U S invited Taiwan to the Summit for Democracy 112 On December 15 2021 the US House of Representative and Senate have both passed the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 in which calls for the enhancements of the security of Taiwan including inviting the Taiwanese navy to the 2022 Rim of the Pacific exercise in the face of increasingly coercive and aggressive behavior by China 113 114 President Joe Biden signed the act on December 27 2021 115 nbsp U S Vice President Kamala Harris with Vice President of Taiwan Lai Ching te at the presidential inauguration of Xiomara Castro of Honduras in January 2022On 27 January 2022 U S Vice President Kamala Harris and Vice President of Taiwan Lai Ching te had a brief conversation during the presidential inauguration ceremony of Xiomara Castro of Honduras 116 On July 28 2022 U S President Joe Biden had a phone call with Chinese President Xi Jinping during which he underscored that the United States policy has not changed and that the United States strongly opposes unilateral efforts to change the status quo or undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait 117 On May 18 2023 the USTR announced that the US and Taiwan under the auspices of the American Institute in Taiwan and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in the US have concluded negotiations on the U S Taiwan Initiative on 21st Century Trade 118 119 On June 29 2023 the State Department approved 440 million in arms sales to Taiwan pending final approval by Congress 120 Beijing opposed the move 121 AIT Chair Laura Rosenberger later stated that the US interest in peace and stability across the Strait and our commitments to supporting Taiwan s self defense capacity are things we will continue to uphold any complaints from Beijing are not going to change that approach 122 On July 28 2023 the Biden administration formally announced a 345 million military assistance package to Taiwan 123 124 Both China and North Korea denounced the move 125 126 Consular representation editThe United States operates a de facto embassy in Taipei called the American Institute in Taiwan It also operates a de facto consulate in Kaohsiung called the American Institute in Taiwan Kaohsiung Branch Office Taiwan operates several diplomatic missions in the United States with the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States located in Washington D C This mission is also accredited to Cuba the Bahamas Grenada Antigua and Barbuda Dominica and Trinidad and Tobago despite Taiwan not having official relations with them Other than the mission in Washington Taiwan also operates representative offices in Atlanta Boston Chicago Honolulu Houston Miami Los Angeles New York San Francisco Seattle Guam and Denver 127 See also editChina United States relations Foreign relations of Taiwan Foreign relations of the United States List of US arms sales to Taiwan Military Assistance Advisory Group Political status of Taiwan Twin Oaks Washington D C United States beef imports in Taiwan United States Taiwan Defense CommandReferences edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from U S Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets United States Department of State Green Michael J Glaser Bonnie S January 13 2017 What Is the U S One China Policy and Why Does it Matter a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help U S Relations With Taiwan U S State Department May 28 2022 Retrieved May 12 2023 IAN CHONG JA February 9 2023 The Many One Chinas Multiple Approaches to Taiwan and China Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Steve Chabot March 16 2018 H R 535 115th Congress 2017 2018 Taiwan Travel Act Congress gov Retrieved April 4 2018 US and Taiwan strengthen ties by signing agreement to formalize consular functions Stars and Strips October 7 2019 Pompeo Michael Lifting Self Imposed Restrictions on the U S Taiwan Relationship U S Department of State U S Government Archived from the original on January 9 2021 Retrieved January 9 2021 Foreign Press Centers PDF fpc state gov Benson Brett Niou Emerson April 7 2000 Comprehending strategic ambiguity US policy toward the Taiwan Strait security issue via ResearchGate a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help In Defense of Strategic Ambiguity in the Taiwan Strait The National Bureau of Asian Research NBR Retrieved June 13 2023 Schuman Michael September 22 2022 No More Strategic Ambiguity on Taiwan The Atlantic Retrieved June 13 2023 Kuo Raymond January 18 2023 Strategic Ambiguity Has the U S and Taiwan Trapped Foreign Policy Retrieved June 13 2023 Sonenshine Tara D March 30 2023 Strategic ambiguity on Taiwan is not working The Hill Retrieved June 13 2023 Perspective Why it makes sense for the U S to not commit to defending Taiwan Washington Post May 25 2022 ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved June 13 2023 Glaser Bonnie S Weiss Jessica Chen Christensen Thomas J November 30 2023 Taiwan and the True Sources of Deterrence Foreign Affairs ISSN 0015 7120 Retrieved December 1 2023 What Biden s Big Shift on Taiwan Means Council on Foreign Relations Retrieved June 13 2023 Kine Phelim September 19 2022 Biden leaves no doubt Strategic ambiguity toward Taiwan is dead POLITICO Retrieved June 13 2023 Brunnstrom David August 20 2021 U S position on Taiwan unchanged despite Biden comment official Reuters Retrieved June 13 2023 US State Department Walks Back Biden s Unusually Strong Comments on Taiwan VOA May 24 2022 Retrieved June 13 2023 U S Relations With Taiwan Retrieved June 13 2023 What is America s policy of strategic ambiguity over Taiwan The Economist May 23 2022 Retrieved June 13 2023 Taiwan Set to Receive 2 Billion in U S Arms Drawing Ire From China The New York Times July 9 2019 Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States American Institute in Taiwan American Institute in Taiwan A GUIDE TO THE UNITED STATES HISTORY OF RECOGNITION DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR RELATIONS BY COUNTRY SINCE 1776 CHINA history state gov U S Department of State Retrieved May 2 2015 Mutual Recognition 1844 Formal recognition by the United States of the Empire of China and by the Empire of China of the United States came on or about June 16 1844 when U S Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary Caleb Cushing presented his credentials and met with Chinese official Qiying to discuss treaty negotiations Prior to this the United States had dispatched consuls to Guangzhou as early as 1784 the first was Samuel Shaw the supercargo on the Empress of China but these had never been formally received by Chinese officials as state representatives The two countries had acknowledged each other s existence before 1844 but the negotiations and treaty of that year marked the first recognition under international law Leonard H D Gordon 2009 Confrontation Over Taiwan Nineteenth Century China and the Powers Lexington Books pp 32 ISBN 978 0 7391 1869 6 Leonard Gordon Early American Relations with Formosa 1849 1870 Historian 19 3 1957 262 289 at pp 271 77 Leonard Gordon Early American Relations with Formosa 1849 1870 at pp 264 68 The Nation 1889 pp 256 57 Pearl S Buck 1938 The Chinese Novel Lecture Delivered before the Swedish Academy at Stockholm December 12 1938 by Pearl S Buck Plebiscite Proposal Retrieved December 12 2009 Fenby Jonathan 2005 Chiang Kai Shek China s Generalissimo and the Nation He Lost Carroll amp Graf Publishers p 413 ISBN 0 7867 1484 0 Retrieved June 28 2010 The Chinese Revolution of 1949 history state gov Retrieved November 23 2018 Taiwan s plan to take back mainland BBC News September 7 2009 Retrieved November 23 2018 The Economic Cooperation Authority Archived from the original on February 17 2007 Retrieved April 3 2013 Chiang Frank 2017 The One China Policy State Sovereignty and Taiwan s International Legal Status Elsevier Science p 229 ISBN 9780081023150 Norris Robert S Arkin William M Burr William October 20 1999 United States Secretly Deployed Nuclear Bombs In 27 Countries and Territories During Cold War National Security Archive National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No 20 Washington D C Archived from the original on February 7 2021 Press Releases by Year American Institute in Taiwan Taiwan welcomes Marut as AIT Taipei director Press Releases 中華民國駐外單位聯合網站 Overseas Office Republic of China Taiwan Archived from the original on February 19 2014 Retrieved June 29 2012 Baron James The Cold War History Behind Nicaragua s Break With Taiwan thediplomat com The Diplomat Retrieved April 24 2022 a b Albright David Stricker Andrea 2018 Taiwans s Former Nuclear Weapons Program Nuclear Weapons On Demand PDF Washington D C Institute for Science and International Security ISBN 978 1 72733 733 4 LCCN 2018910946 Archived from the original PDF on January 16 2022 Ren jian Guan September 1 2011 lt The Taiwan you don t know Stories of ROC Arm Forces gt Puomo Digital Publishing ISBN 9789576636493 in Chinese Zheng Jing Cheng Nan jung Ye Xiangzhi Xu Manqing June 13 1987 lt Shocking inside story of the Kinmen Military Murder Case gt Freedom Era Weekly Ver 175 176 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Sui Cindy May 18 2017 Harding James ed The man who helped prevent a nuclear crisis BBC News BBC Archived from the original on April 5 2021 Yi shen Chen January 8 2017 Chang Hsien yi I didn t betray Taiwan I betrayed Hau Pei tsun Storm Media Group Retrieved January 8 2017 Segal Gerald August 5 1998 Written at Taipei Taiwan Brauchli Marcus ed Taiwan s nuclear card The Wall Street Journal New York City New York United States Dow Jones amp Company News Corp ISSN 0099 9660 OCLC 781541372 Archived from the original on November 16 2021 Yeh Joseph U S House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to visit Taiwan on Sunday reports focustaiwan tw Focus Taiwan Retrieved April 7 2022 a b Tzu hsuan Liu US to bolster innovation ties delegation taipeitimes com Taipei Times Retrieved February 20 2023 H R 419 Taiwan Policy Act of 2013 HR 419 PDF GPO gov U S Relations With Taiwan US to sell arms to Taiwan despite Chinese opposition BBC News December 16 2015 Retrieved December 17 2015 Obama to push ahead on Taiwan frigate sales despite Chinese anger CNBC Reuters December 14 2015 Retrieved December 17 2015 China warns against first major US Taiwan arms sale in four years The Guardian Reuters December 16 2015 Retrieved December 17 2015 Horton Chris June 12 2018 U S Unveils an Office in Taiwan but Sends No Top Officials The New York Times Jiang Steven June 12 2018 Washington opens de facto embassy in Taiwan angering China CNN Retrieved August 2 2022 Waldron Greg September 25 2018 USA approves support package for Taiwan air force FlightGlobal Singapore Archived from the original on September 25 2018 Retrieved September 25 2018 Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States TECRO Foreign Military Sales Order FMSO II Case United States Defense Security Cooperation Agency Washington United States Department of Defense September 24 2018 Archived from the original on September 25 2018 Retrieved September 25 2018 U S State Department approves possible 2 2 billion arms sale to Taiwan Reuters July 8 2019 Retrieved July 8 2019 Defense Security Cooperation Agency Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States tecro MK 48 Mod 6 Advanced Technology at Heavy Weight Torpedo HWT DSCA Archived from the original on September 23 2020 Retrieved September 22 2020 US Health and Human Services Secretary Visits Taiwan VOA News August 9 2020 Magnier Mark September 17 2020 US sending State Department official Keith Krach to Taiwan for Lee Teng hui memorial service South China Morning Post a b US envoy to United Nations meets with Taiwan official in NY ABC News Larter David October 26 2020 U S State Department to allow sale of hundreds of anti ship missiles to Taiwan amid diplomatic row Defense News Retrieved October 28 2020 a b Chung Lawrence January 14 2021 Taiwan a model for the world American envoy Kelly Craft says South China Morning Post Blanchard Michelle Nichols Ben January 14 2021 U S stands by Taiwan envoy says after cancelled trip Reuters via www reuters com a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lederer Edith M April 27 2021 Outging US ambassador says world must end Taiwan s exclusion AP NEWS Blanchard Ben June 8 2021 China says U S senators visiting Taiwan on military plane a vile provocation reuters com Reuters Retrieved August 22 2022 Interim National Security Strategic Guidance PDF The White House March 3 2021 Retrieved April 2 2021 Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jen Psaki Co Chair of the Gender Policy Council and Chief of Staff to the First Lady Julissa Reynoso and Co Chair and Executive Director of the Gender Policy Council Jennifer Klein March 8 2021 The White House March 9 2021 Retrieved April 2 2021 Thompson Alex Gijs Camille May 23 2022 Biden vows to defend Taiwan with US military if China invades POLITICO Retrieved May 24 2022 US senator visits Taiwan as China ups military threat apnews com Associated Press May 31 2022 Retrieved August 22 2022 U S puts back no support of Taiwan independence statement on fact sheet CNA Focus Taiwan Chiang Stephanie July 7 2022 US Senator Rick Scott arrives in Taiwan taiwannews com tw Taiwan News Retrieved August 22 2022 Mozur Paul Chien Amy Chang August 2 2022 Pelosi s visit is likely to prompt a sharp response from China The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 2 2022 Cheung Eric Cole Devan August 14 2022 A second US congressional delegation visits Taiwan cnn com CNN Retrieved August 22 2022 Deaton Jennifer Stracqualursi Veronica August 21 2022 cnn com cnn com CNN Retrieved August 22 2022 U S senator arrives in Taiwan defying angry Beijing reuters com Retrieved August 25 2022 US governor visits Taiwan in trip focused on semiconductors aljazeera com Al Jazeera Retrieved September 3 2022 a b McCarthy welcomes Taiwan President to bipartisan meeting optimistic US and Taiwan can promote democracy peace and stability CNN April 5 2023 Huang Novia Kuei hsiang Wen Huang Frances U S congressional delegation arrives in Taiwan focustaiwan tw Focus Taiwan Retrieved June 28 2023 Hansler Jennifer Bertrand Natasha US will redirect millions of funds for Egypt to Taiwan and Lebanon cnn com CNN Retrieved September 17 2023 Taiwan official urges U S to speed up arms delivery at annual meet Focus Taiwan Focus Taiwan CNA English News October 3 2023 Retrieved October 3 2023 Taiwan US defense meeting launches Taipei Times www taipeitimes com October 2 2023 Retrieved October 3 2023 Taiwan urges US to speed up weapons deliveries boost defence supply chain South China Morning Post October 3 2023 Retrieved October 3 2023 Chen Kelvin North Carolina opens investment office in Taiwan taiwannews com tw Taiwan News Retrieved November 7 2023 a b c Stating America s Case to China s Hu Jintao A Primer on U S China Taiwan Policy The Heritage Foundation Stating America s Case to China s Hu Jintao A Primer on U S China Taiwan Policy The Heritage Foundation For a detailed description of the U S one China stance see Ambassador Harvey Feldman A Primer on U S Policy Toward the One China Issue Questions and Answers Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No 1429 April 12 2001 Taiwan U S Department of State Stating America s Case to China s Hu Jintao A Primer on U S China Taiwan Policy The Heritage Foundation Testimony of John H Holdridge Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian Affairs in hearing China Taiwan United States Policy Committee on Foreign Affairs U S House of Representatives 97th Cong 2nd Sess August 18 1982 pp 15 16 Holdridge described the Six Assurances in his memoir Crossing the Divide p 232 a b ABCNEWS com Bush Vows Taiwan Support Archived from the original on November 10 2003 Retrieved June 1 2014 Jean Edward Smith Bush 2016 p 1197 Taiwan grateful for U S House support for ICAO bid Focus Taiwan focustaiwan tw US passes law supporting Taiwan ICAO bid July 14 2013 ROC Central News Agency U S arms sales to return to normal track Taiwan official Waldron Greg Outlook gloomy for Taiwan F 16 C D deal Flight International May 26 2011 Taiwan rejects further advanced radar system price hikes CNA June 14 2011 Trump risks showdown with China after call with Taiwan CNN December 2 2016 Retrieved December 3 2016 Trump speaks with Taiwanese president a major break with decades of U S policy on China Washington Post Hirschfeld Davis Julie Lipton Eric December 6 2018 Bob Dole Worked Behind the Scenes on Trump Taiwan Call The New York Times Retrieved August 2 2022 Trump risks angering China with 1 4bn arms deal to Taiwan The Guardian Associated Press June 29 2017 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved May 20 2023 van der Wees Gerrit March 19 2018 The Taiwan Travel Act in Context thediplomat com The Diplomat Retrieved June 4 2018 a b U S president signs Taiwan Travel Act despite warnings from China Politics FocusTaiwan Mobile CNA English News Donald Trump signs Taiwan Travel Act drawing China s ire DW 17 03 2018 DW COM China urges US to correct mistake on Taiwan rules Taipei Times Taipeitimes com March 19 2018 Beijing strongly dissatisfied as Trump signs Taiwan Travel Act March 17 2018 Chung Lawrence July 17 2018 Taiwan puts second squad of US Apache attack helicopters on duty as Beijing boosts military presence South China Morning Post Hsu Stacy Huang Frances Chen Christie Lin Ko March 27 2020 Trump signs TAIPEI Act into law Central News Agency Retrieved March 29 2020 Blinken urges all U N member states to support Taiwan participation Reuters October 26 2021 Retrieved October 28 2021 Taipei thanks Blinken for backing Taiwan s participation in U N Focus Taiwan focustaiwan tw in Chinese Retrieved October 28 2021 Participant List The Summit for Democracy United States Department of State Retrieved December 15 2021 Smith Adam December 2 2021 Text H R 4350 117th Congress 2021 2022 National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 www congress gov Retrieved December 17 2021 US Congress supports Taiwan in defense spending bill RTI Radio Taiwan International in Chinese Retrieved December 17 2021 Singh Kanishka December 27 2021 U S President Biden signs 770 billion defense bill Reuters Retrieved December 30 2021 China angered over Kamala Harris meeting with Taiwan vice president NBC News January 28 2022 Retrieved February 4 2022 House The White July 28 2022 Readout of President Biden s Call with President Xi Jinping of the People s Republic of China The White House Retrieved May 20 2023 USTR Announcement Regarding U S Taiwan Trade Initiative United States Trade Representative Retrieved May 19 2023 Areddy James T May 18 2023 U S Taiwan Reach Trade Deal as Tensions With China Simmer Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved May 19 2023 US plans US 440 million in arms sale and military vehicle support for Taiwan South China Morning Post June 30 2023 Retrieved July 7 2023 China accuses the US of turning Taiwan into a powder keg with its latest sales of military equipment AP News July 5 2023 Retrieved July 7 2023 US is committed to Taiwan s self defense AIT chair Taipei Times www taipeitimes com July 8 2023 Retrieved July 7 2023 House The White July 28 2023 Memorandum on the Delegation of Authority Under Section 506 a 3 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 The White House Retrieved August 4 2023 Ables Kelsey July 29 2023 U S to provide up to 345 million in military aid to Taiwan Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved August 4 2023 China accuses U S of turning Taiwan into powder keg after White House announces new military aid package CBS News www cbsnews com July 30 2023 Retrieved August 4 2023 Choi Soo Hyang August 3 2023 North Korea denounces US arms aid to Taiwan as dangerous provocation Reuters Retrieved August 4 2023 台灣指南 美洲 台灣指南 Retrieved December 9 2019 Further reading editBenson Brett V and Emerson MS Niou Public opinion foreign policy and the security balance in the Taiwan Strait Security Studies 14 2 2005 274 289 Bush Richard C At cross purposes US Taiwan relations since 1942 Routledge 2015 Carpenter Ted Galen America s coming war with China a collision course over Taiwan Macmillan 2015 Glaser Charles L A US China grand bargain The hard choice between military competition and accommodation International Security 39 4 2015 49 90 Hickey Dennis Van Vranken America s Two point Policy and the Future of Taiwan Asian Survey 1988 881 896 in JSTOR Hickey Dennis V Parallel Progress US Taiwan Relations During an Era of Cross Strait Rapprochement Journal of Chinese Political Science 20 4 2015 369 384 Hu Shaohua A Framework for Analysis of National Interest United States Policy toward Taiwan Contemporary Security Policy Vol 37 No 1 April 2016 144 167 Kim Claudia J 2019 Military alliances as a stabilising force U S relations with South Korea and Taiwan 1950s 1960s Journal of Strategic Studies Liao Nien chung Chang and Dalton Kuen da Lin Rebalancing Taiwan US Relations Survival 57 6 2015 145 158 online Ling Lily HM Ching Chane Hwang and Boyu Chen Subaltern straits exit voice and loyalty in the United States China Taiwan relations International Relations of the Asia Pacific 2009 lcp013 Matray James I ed East Asia and the United States An Encyclopedia of relations since 1784 2 vol Greenwood 2002 excerpt v 2 Peraino Kevin A Force So Swift Mao Truman and the Birth of Modern China 1949 2017 focus on S policy in 1949 Sutter Robert US Domestic Debate Over Policy Toward Mainland China and Taiwan Key Findings Outlook and Lessons American Journal of Chinese Studies 2001 133 144 External links editTaiwan US Relations Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives Archived January 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Mandatory Guidance from Department of State Regarding Contact with Taiwan U S Relations With Taiwan Taiwan US Relations from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives Stating America s Case to China s Hu Jintao A Primer on U S China Taiwan Policy Portals nbsp Taiwan nbsp China nbsp United States nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taiwan United States relations amp oldid 1201663151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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