HomeNewsOpinionThinking through a Taiwan conflict – How can countries like India respond?

Thinking through a Taiwan conflict – How can countries like India respond?

How can countries sympathetic to Taiwan respond through politico-legal options in the event of a conflict? An appraisal of whether Taiwan meets statehood criterial, the legality of other countries operating in the Taiwan Straits, and taking the ‘Taiwan question’ to the ICJ are options

March 06, 2024 / 12:28 IST
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Chinese operations in the Taiwan Straits disrupt a foreign State’s right of passage.

In the past few years, the China-Taiwan cross-Straits relationship has witnessed rising tensions. There now exist fundamental faultlines in the cross-Straits relationship, which may create an escalatory ladder leading to an eventual conflict scenario. Such a scenario shall endanger the interests of not just parties directly involved, such as the US, China and Taiwan, but also other countries around the world.

In this regard, what are the politico-legal options available to concerned States at multilateral forums like the United Nations to voice their interests in the event of a conflict? A three-part solution may provide some answers.

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1. Is Taiwan A ‘State’?

We need to debate the merits of China’s claim of ‘Non-Interference’ based on the assumption that the Taiwan question is “purely an internal matter”. A basic reading of the 1933 ‘Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States’ indicates that Taiwan’s case unwaveringly aligns with three criteria of possessing statehood – a defined territory, a permanent population of about 23 million people, and a government elected by said people. In its most simplest interpretation, Taiwan also fulfils the fourth criterion, in that it has the capacity to enter into relations with other States. Taiwan has 12 current diplomatic partners, and has had many more in the past, indicating such “capacity.”