Trump told Taiwan not to 'go independent' - but does it want to?

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Tessa WongAsia Digital Reporter

Alex WROBLEWSKI / AFP via Getty Images Trump wears a white USA cap and a dark suit, while pointing at something off-cameraAlex WROBLEWSKI / AFP via Getty Images

Trump's comments have sparked a flurry of responses from Taiwan

Hours after meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing last week, Donald Trump issued a stern warning to Taiwan against pursuing independence.

"I'm not looking to have somebody go independent. And, you know, we're supposed to travel 9,500 miles to fight a war. I'm not looking for that. I want them to cool down. I want China to cool down," he told Fox News in an interview that aired on Friday.

Trump's comments - some of the strongest a US president has made so far on the issue - immediately sparked a flurry of responses from Taiwan saying it does not see the need to formally declare independence.

Taiwanese independence is the reddest of red lines for Beijing, which claims Taiwan as its own and has accused its president Lai Ching-te of being a separatist.

But the issue is a lot more nuanced.

Why does China want Taiwan?

China's desire to "reunify" with Taiwan is a long and historical one.

It dates back to the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949, when the Chinese Communist Party won control of China and the losing Kuomintang forces retreated to Taiwan, setting up their own government.

Beijing has since claimed the self-governed island. But after Xi came to power, the Chinese government has doubled down on its threats and sought ways to stamp out what it sees as separatism. Taiwan's "reunification" with China has become a key goal - Xi himself has called it an "unstoppable" reality.

In recent years, China has stepped up various forms of pressure, through military drills that have simulated blockades; the diplomatic isolation of Taiwan; and greyzone warfare where it sends warships and fighter jets close to Taiwanese waters and airspace on a regular basis.

During last week's summit, Xi had told Trump that the issue of Taiwan was the most important one in US-China relations, and that mishandling it could lead to conflict.

As the US is Taiwan's closest ally - it is bound by law to provide the island with the means to defend itself - observers have long worried that any attack on Taiwan would draw the US into direct conflict with China.

China has made clear its stance on Taiwan in its Anti-Secession Law, introduced in 2005, in which it states that it wants "peaceful reunification" with the island.

But the Anti-Secession Law also states that should "Taiwan independence" forces cause secession from China, or the possibility of "peaceful reunification" has been exhausted, China can employ "non-peaceful means" to protect its territorial integrity.

What this means is that China does not rule out the use of military force to take Taiwan if it deems it necessary. Most people believe that a formal declaration of independence by Taiwan's government would trigger this response.

Does Taiwan want independence?

Taiwan has close economic and cultural ties with China. But most people in Taiwan, which has a robust democratic system, see themselves as politically distinct from China, which has become increasingly authoritarian in recent years.

Most also want to maintain the status quo - which means neither formally declaring independence nor unifying with China.

The official position of the Taiwanese government under the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which has ruled Taiwan since 2016, caters to this view.

President Lai, and his predecessor Tsai Ing-wen, have insisted that since Taiwan considers itself an independent country, there is no need to formally declare independence.

Getty Images Lai Ching-te, Taiwan's president, speaks during a news conference Getty Images

Beijing has accused Taiwan's president Lai Ching-te (pictured) of being a separatist

This is essentially a way of asserting Taiwan's sovereignty while also ensuring they do not cross China's red line.

Even if they wanted to, neither the president nor the government can easily declare independence - it can only be done formally if Taiwan's parliament-like Legislative Yuan passes a constitutional amendment and if a majority of citizens vote for it in a referendum.

But Beijing remains wary of the DPP, which in its early days advocated for sovereignty, and particularly reviles Lai who made strong comments against Beijing in the past before taking office. It often lambasts him and his party as "pro-independence" separatists.

Does the US support Taiwan independence?

While Trump's recent comments about Taiwan have generated headlines, no US government has ever stated explicitly that Taiwan should be independent.

Following his summit with Xi, Trump said the Chinese leader "doesn't want a movement for independence" in Taiwan and that Trump "heard him out" but "didn't make a comment on it".

The US, on the whole, tries to maintain a delicate balancing act when it comes to the hugely sensitive issue of Taiwan.

In 1979, the US severed formal ties with the island when Washington established diplomatic relations with Beijing. This means that the US acknowledges Beijing's position that there is only one Chinese government - in Beijing.

But in the same year, the US passed the Taiwan Relations Act which states that the US can "provide Taiwan with arms of a defensive character" - which is why it continues to sell weapons to Taiwan to this day.

The act also states that peace in the area is in the US's interests and that it maintains the capacity "to resist any resort to force or other forms of coercion that would jeopardise the security or the social or economic system" of Taiwan.

This is why Trump's latest warning to Taiwan has surprised some observers, who see it as a sign that the US may be wavering in its commitment to the island - and suggest that Xi may have made inroads in influencing the US president.

Ryan Hass, an analyst with the US think tank Brookings Institution, said that Trump had "elevated the risk of confrontation" as his "visible sympathy for Xi's framing on Taiwan will embolden Beijing to increase pressure on Taipei".

After the summit, Trump was non-committal about giving final approval to the latest package, telling Fox News that it "depends on China" and that "it's a very good negotiating chip for us frankly". He later told reporters he would "make a determination over the next fairly short period".

Bound by the Taiwan Relations Act, the US policy on Taiwan has not fundamentally changed in recent decades despite previous presidents' rhetoric.

Former President Joe Biden twice said the US would defend Taiwan in the event of an attack by China, appearing to stray from America's position of "strategic ambiguity" - a policy under which it does not commit to defending Taiwan but also does not rule out the option.

Each time, however, his administration later clarified that US policy on Taiwan had not changed.

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