By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Japan Defense And China Springboard
A self-governing
Taiwan would anchor Japan’s defense and deny China a springboard from which it
could threaten U.S. allies in the western Pacific. Today Taiwan is a full-blown
liberal democracy—whose subjugation to Beijing’s totalitarianism would hinder
democratic aspirations across the region, including in China itself. Taiwan is
economically crucial to the rest of the world, by its role as the primary
producer of advanced microchips. A war over the island could easily cause a
global depression. Yet another key difference between MacArthur’s time and
today is the flourishing of a wide network of U.S. allies across the
Indo-Pacific, countries that rely on U.S. support for their security.
In recent years,
Chinese leader Xi Jinping has shown an impatient
determination to resolve Taiwan’s status in a way his predecessors never did.
He has ordered a meteoric military buildup, instructing Chinese forces to give
him 2027 a full range of options for unifying Taiwan. These signals are triggering
debate in Washington and elsewhere about whether Taiwan is strategically and
economically important enough to merit protection through the most challenging
of contingencies. But make no mistake: whether one cares about the future of
democracy in Asia or prefers to ponder only the cold math of realpolitik,
Taiwan’s fate matters.
Defending Democracy
In 1996, the
Taiwanese voted for the first time to directly elect their president, whose
maximum tenure was newly shortened from two six-year terms to two four-year
terms. Four years later, they elected an opposition-party president, ending the
political monopoly of the Kuomintang party,
which had ruled the island since 1945. Over the past two-plus decades,
democracy has only deepened its roots in Taiwan, which enjoys an orderly
transition of political power every four to eight years.
Taiwan is ranked by
the Economist Intelligence Unit as the world’s eighth-most fully democratic
polity, ahead of every country in Asia and even the much older democracies of
the United Kingdom and the United States. Its people enjoy freedom of speech
and freedom of association. Taiwan also has one of the most economically
equitable societies anywhere, with a relatively low disparity in income
distribution despite having among the highest median incomes. Its per capita
GDP overtook Japan’s in 2023.
Taiwan ranks sixth in
the world for gender equality, according to a UN Development Program index.
Women hold more than 40 percent of seats in Taiwan’s national legislature, the
highest percentage in Asia and well ahead of the United States, where just 28
percent of members of Congress are women. Taiwanese have twice elected a female
president, several of its leading cities are led by female mayors, and the
incoming vice president is female. Taiwan’s respect for the rights of
indigenous peoples (with designated legislative seats) and minority groups
stands out, too. In 2019, Taiwan became the first society in Asia to legalize
same-sex marriage.
Taiwan is a
democratic standout in another important respect: its faith in democracy is
growing at a time when many democracies are doubting their system of
government. A Taiwan Foundation for Democracy poll in 2023 found that
three-quarters of Taiwanese believe that although there are problems with
democracy, it remains the best system. And in a refreshing contrast with the
United States, younger people were especially likely to hold that view.
It is difficult to
overstate the significance of Taiwan’s strong democracy, given the political
realities just across the Taiwan Strait, where more than 1.4 billion people
sharing many linguistic and cultural traditions are subject to totalitarian
rule. Numerous Chinese citizens draw inspiration from Taiwan’s political
transition from martial law to democracy, which offers a model for what China
could become. Fearing precisely such a result, officials in Beijing have long
tried to caricature Taiwan as slavishly imitating Western forms of governance.
But it is the Chinese Communist Party that is doing so by clinging to its
Marxist-Leninist system, a discredited political model imported from
Europe.
The loss of Taiwan as
a democratic alternative would end the experiment with popular, multiparty
self-governance by a society with significant Chinese heritage, with bad
tidings for the possibility of democracy in China and far beyond.
Chip Wars
A Chinese takeover of
Taiwan would devastate semiconductor manufacturing—the
backbone of almost every strategically important industry today and the
lifeblood of our big data world. The planet now produces approximately $600
billion worth of chips each year. Those chips end up in products—from
smartphones to cars to supercomputers—that are collectively worth multiple trillions
of dollars, and the services delivered by these devices amount to tens of
trillions annually. The very latest generation chips (those with circuits five
nanometers or smaller) are produced in only two places: Taiwan (by Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC) and, to a much lesser extent,
South Korea (by Samsung). Taiwan now accounts for roughly half of the global
production capacity for all semiconductors and a much higher proportion—perhaps
90 percent—for the most advanced chips. Put differently, Taiwan’s market share
for advanced semiconductors is roughly twice the share of oil produced by the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Much as cheap Russian
energy fueled German industry for decades, so, too, have abundant Taiwanese
semiconductors propelled global technological progress, the artificial
intelligence boom, and the rise of trillion-dollar U.S. tech titans such as
Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Nvidia. Thanks largely to Taiwanese
manufacturers’ efficiency gains, the unit costs of computing power have fallen
exponentially in recent decades. The cutting-edge chips that are (or will be)
used in Apple’s latest generation smartphones, for instance, now cost less than
$100 apiece. Combining high-powered computing capabilities with low unit costs
generates a virtuous cycle of discovery and productivity. Faster airplanes did
not build faster airplanes, but faster computers will help build faster
computers.
The loss of Taiwanese
chips would shatter that cycle. Unlike oil and gas, commodities whose source
can be switched with relative ease, no such fungibility exists for high-end
semiconductors. It would take years to build and activate high-end chip production
facilities to replace Taiwanese foundries. Each month of delay in resuming chip
supplies at pre-crisis levels would cause compounding global economic losses
and stall progress in critical fields, from medicine to materials science. In a
best-case scenario, inferior, far less energy-efficient substitutes would
require massively increased electricity use merely to keep society functioning.
In the more likely scenario, global computing power would effectively be capped
for a prolonged period, wreaking profound economic and political damage.
Even if China
captured Taiwanese foundries intact, they would probably struggle mightily to
reach prewar production levels. Disruptions to electricity, software updates,
and the supply of foreign equipment, maintenance, and engineering—not to
mention the likely flight overseas by many of Taiwan’s most knowledgeable
semiconductor experts—would throttle Taiwan’s chip factories. For months or
even years, occupied production facilities would face grave difficulties,
especially given the postwar economic sanctions that the world’s democracies
would impose.
The global economic
convulsion that would follow an interruption of Taiwanese chips could well
exceed those caused by the global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic.
The hedge fund manager Ken Griffin has estimated that losing access to
Taiwanese semiconductors would shave five to ten percent off U.S. GDP. “It’s an
immediate Great Depression,” he assessed in 2022.
If Taiwan’s chip
factories somehow remained intact and operational, Beijing would control
virtually the entire world’s supply of the most advanced semiconductors. If, on
the other hand, they struggled to resume operations, as is more likely, the world
would have to settle for much inferior older-generation chips—of which China is
on track to become the largest producer.
Certainly, China’s
economy would suffer major setbacks if Taiwan’s high-end chips disappeared from
global markets. But so would the economies of the rest of the industrialized
world. Beijing’s Marxist-Leninist rulers, who regard power as zero-sum, may consider
this a price worth paying—especially if China ultimately emerges as the world’s
leading chip producer. Indeed, Xi and his advisers might plausibly conclude
that China could weather, and ultimately leverage, such a Taiwanese production
halt better than any other country.
From Order To Disorder
Whether through
outright war or intense coercion, Chinese annexation of Taiwan against the will
of its 24 million people would disrupt the global order in ways unseen since
World War II. For starters, Beijing might not stop after annexing Taiwan. As
Russian President Vladimir Putin has demonstrated in Ukraine, the leaders of
revanchist powers are not known for appetite suppression. China is grabbing
land in Bhutan and engaging in border skirmishes with India. It pursues
disputes with all its maritime neighbors. It is actively challenging Japan’s
claims over the islands that Tokyo administers and calls the Senkaku (and which
China calls the Diaoyu), as well as the territorial claims of five other
governments in the South China Sea.
Ominously, official maps, propaganda, and statements question the legitimacy of
Japanese sovereignty over the Ryukyu island chain—including Okinawa—and of
Russia’s control over parts of its far east.
Japan would be in a
far weaker position to defend its territory were Taiwan under Beijing’s
control. Japan’s defensive strategy relies on the ability to threaten People’s
Liberation Army (PLA) forces that approach, penetrate, or venture beyond the
“first island chain,” the long string of Pacific
archipelagoes that includes Japan and Taiwan. To ensure Japan’s security,
the entire chain must remain in friendly hands. If Taiwan hosted PLA bases—the
“unsinkable aircraft carrier and submarine tender” General MacArthur warned
of—Japan would become acutely insecure. PLA doctrine stresses precisely this
point. As soon as Taiwan is reunified with mainland China, Japan’s maritime
lines of communication will fall completely within the striking range of
China’s fighters and bombers. China made its capabilities clear during
extensive PLA exercises, when one of several ballistic missiles it fired landed
in the water near Japan’s Yonaguni Island, only 68
miles from Taiwan.
The fall of Taiwan
would be even worse for the Philippines and other Southeast Asian countries.
Beijing would have the power to complicate U.S. access to East Asia, Southeast
Asia, and the Indian Ocean—the littoral of the most populous, economically active
part of the world.
By establishing an
indisputably dominant position in East Asia, Chinese President Xi could pursue
preeminence globally. The military resources, planning, and training that have
long been concentrated on taking Taiwan could, following a successful annexation,
be used for projecting power throughout continental Asia, the Pacific Ocean,
and the Indian Ocean. China could even attempt to make inroads in the Atlantic
Ocean, where the PLA already operates tracking, telemetry, and command stations
in Namibia and Argentina. Equatorial Guinea, Angola, and Gabon are among the
19-odd countries with which Beijing has been pursuing military facilities
beyond the ones it already has in Djibouti and Cambodia. America’s history
shows how achieving regional preeminence facilitates global power projection.
Only by dominating the Western Hemisphere in the nineteenth century was the
United States able to become a global superpower in the twentieth.
Members of Taiwan’s navy participating in a drill,
Kaohsiung, Taiwan, January 2024
It is impossible to
predict precisely how China might act as a global power, but decades of data
suggest it would take a far less benign approach than the United States. At an
Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in Vietnam in 2010, China’s foreign
minister, Yang Jiechi, foreshadowed future bullying
when he announced, “China is a big country and you are small countries, and
that is a fact.” Beijing followed suit with the de facto annexation and
outright construction of territory throughout the South China Sea and a massive
military buildup. China has declared its goal to become a “world-class”
military and to use its armed forces to defend its interests wherever it
defines them around the world. And those interests are set to expand, with
Beijing having unveiled a “global security initiative,” a “global development
initiative,” and a “global civilization initiative.” These sprawling programs
promote Chinese-led alternatives to Western alliances and Western economic and
political models. As a 2023 State Council document explains, they “showcase the
global vision of the Communist Party of China.”
Herein lies a danger
similar to the one U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt warned of in 1939: “So
soon as one nation dominates Europe, that nation will be able to turn to the
world sphere.” Today, Asia has replaced Europe as the world’s center of
economic and technological gravity. The region’s domination by a hostile power
today would be equally dangerous to U.S. interests. Asian countries would not
eagerly accept Beijing’s diktats, but absent Washington’s intervention, their
options would be limited. China alone commands an economy meaningfully larger
than that of all its Asian neighbors combined, India included. China’s navy,
meanwhile, boasts firepower second only to that of the U.S. Navy. And it is
relatively concentrated: imagine if the entire U.S. naval fleet primarily
operated in an arc from New York to New Orleans.
With a U.S. counterbalancer committed to freedom of navigation and
economic access, all Asian countries can prosper—including China, as decades of
economic growth demonstrate. But were China to annex Taiwan and proceed to push
the United States out of Asia, even the most powerful countries would see their
economic sovereignty and long-term national autonomy compromised.
The Proliferation Problem
At that point,
another problem would arise: having lost faith in the United States’ security
commitments, U.S. allies would face great incentives to develop their nuclear
weapons. Ever since China’s first nuclear test, in 1964, Washington has been
able to dissuade most East and Southeast Asian countries from going nuclear.
But an Asia reeling from the annexation of Taiwan would present very different
circumstances and might send leaders scrambling to acquire nuclear armaments to
protect themselves.
Japan has the
shortest path to developing nuclear weapons, boasting both its facilities for
processing nuclear fuel and what is likely the world’s largest plutonium
stockpile. In February 2022, months before he was assassinated, former Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe raised the idea of Japan engaging in “nuclear sharing,”
proposing something similar to the arrangements Washington has with several
NATO allies, whereby nuclear weapons are stored on bases in the host country
but under U.S. control. But Japan could go further and develop its independent
capability. In the words of Vipin Narang, a political scientist now serving as
an official in the Pentagon, Japan has “a very real, and potentially swift,
pathway to a nuclear weapons arsenal in the event of a rapid deterioration of
Japan’s security environment.”
South Korea, for its
part, has a world-class civilian nuclear program, with 26 reactors in service.
Although the country currently lacks the domestic enrichment or reprocessing
facilities required to build nuclear weapons, its politicians openly debate the
question of whether to develop a nuclear arsenal. And given South Korea’s
world-class scientific expertise and industrial base, Seoul could doubtless
fashion deployable fission devices within a handful of years if it so chose.
Were Japan or South
Korea to go nuclear, the effects might not stop there. Leaders in Beijing might
conclude that they needed considerably more than the 1,500 warheads China is
expected to have by 2035. Should China decide to expand its arsenal, both the
United States and Russia would likely seek to expand their arsenals, too. India
would probably follow suit; indeed, there are already signs that it is
considering doing so. In December 2022, India tested an updated version of its
Agni-5 ballistic missile, whose range exceeds 4,000 miles—sufficient to reach
all of China. If India expanded its nuclear stockpile, historical patterns
suggest its archrival, Pakistan, would likely seek parity.
Asian nuclear
proliferation could even spill over into the Middle East, where Iran continues
to edge closer to breakout capability. If two of the United States’ closest
Asian allies, Japan and South Korea, became nuclear weapons states, it would be
functionally impossible for Washington to secure a multinational coalition to
punish Iran for building a bomb—something Iran might be more tempted to try in
the chaos that would follow a takeover of Taiwan. If Iran went nuclear, Saudi
Arabia would almost certainly do so, too, perhaps first through a stopgap
sharing agreement with Pakistan and subsequently by developing a domestic
production capability.
A nuclear cascade
following a Chinese annexation of Taiwan could add hundreds of nuclear warheads
or more to stockpiles globally. Decades of counterproliferation progress would
be lost. Far better that this Pandora’s box were never opened in the first place.
Economic Exclusion
If China annexed
Taiwan, the United States could well lose access to valuable trade and
investment opportunities in Asia, severely damaging the U.S. economy. History
shows that regional hegemons regularly restrict rivals’ economic prospects. In
a 2018 Foreign Affairs article about “life in China’s Asia,” the political
scientist Jennifer Lind noted that in their quest for regional dominance, such
countries “develop and wield tremendous economic power.” They also “build
massive militaries, expel external rivals, and use regional institutions and
cultural programs to entrench their influence.”
In case this sort of
behavior sounds alien, consider the United States’ own efforts in the
nineteenth century and early twentieth century to enforce the 1823 Monroe
Doctrine and extirpate European influence from the Western Hemisphere.
Motivated by a fear of European entry (or re-entry in some cases), Washington
engaged in all manner of aggressive behavior: buying out debts owed to European
banks, deploying warships in the Caribbean, toppling governments, and
intervening militarily. Unlike a fledgling United States, a China buoyed by
possession of Taiwan would have the economic and military means to immediately
enforce its own Monroe Doctrine. And unlike today’s United States, China under
Xi does not accept the postwar rules and norms that safeguard the sovereignty
of a superpower’s neighbor, no matter its size.
Chinese attempts to
hive off Asia, the world’s largest, most dynamic economic region, would deal a
devastating blow to U.S. economic interests. East Asia and the Pacific account
for one-third of global GDP in purchasing power parity terms, a share roughly
twice that of the United States. The region’s vibrant, open trading networks
would likely degenerate into more of a hub-and-spoke system, with China as the
hub and subjugated countries at the end of the spokes. In the worst-case
scenario, the United States could lose access to trade volumes with its nine
largest Asian trade partners other than China. This group’s two-way goods trade
with the United States was nearly $940 billion in 2023—about 60 percent larger
than the U.S. goods trade with China itself. U.S. investors might also lose
out. In Asian countries besides China, particularly in Southeast Asia, the
United States is one of the largest sources of invested capital. Americans have
plowed untold sums into factories, data centers, and real estate properties
throughout the region. Because these and other brick-and-mortar infrastructure
are physically immovable, they would be vulnerable to forced changes of
ownership under Chinese coercion.
A China that had
annexed Taiwan might also accelerate efforts to have other Asian countries
reduce their reliance on the U.S. dollar as a reserve currency. Most
governments in the region would prefer not to be forced to choose between the
dollar and yuan, just as many of them have tried to avoid taking sides on the
broader competition between the United States and China. But a less constrained
Beijing could plausibly seek to abolish such a middle course, pushing its
trading partners to more widely use yuan in their economies and kicking off a
regionwide de-dollarization.
The New West Berlin
In his memoirs, U.S.
President Dwight Eisenhower envisioned a dangerous chain reaction that Taiwan’s
fall would trigger: “The future security of Japan, the Philippines, Thailand,
Vietnam and even Okinawa would be placed in jeopardy and the United States’
vital interests would suffer severely.” Consequences that already looked
dangerous when Ike was in the White House 65 years ago would be far more dire
today. Taiwan’s annexation in the face of U.S. inaction or ineffective action
would present U.S. allies in Asia and Europe with a nightmare they have never
faced before: Washington proving unable to protect a polity that is an ally in
all but name.
Autocracy would surge
ahead in the global contest of systems. An illiberal, China-centric world order
could supplant the liberal, U.S.-led system that for 80 years has underpinned
remarkable improvement in the human condition. This shift would curtail trade,
limit India’s development, and crimp middle powers, including important U.S.
allies. Moreover, China’s quest for domination abroad would cement autocracy at
home, shrinking the prospects for its own population. The stage for future
warfare would be set.
Taiwan is in a sense
the West Berlin of the new cold war unfolding between Beijing and the free
world. It is an outpost of liberty, prosperity, and democracy living in the
shadow of an authoritarian superpower. Just as Stalin tested the free world 76
years ago by blockading Berlin, Xi is now testing it with rising pressure on
Taiwan. Back then, U.S. leadership and major investment galvanized a
four-decade multinational commitment to keep West Berlin and West Germany free.
The stakes are equally stark today with Taiwan—and there is no time left to
waste.
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