Asia

Taiwan

Experts in this Region

Rush Doshi Headshot
Rush Doshi

C.V. Starr Senior Fellow for Asia Studies and Director of the China Strategy Initiative

David Sacks

Fellow for Asia Studies

  • China Strategy Initiative
    China in the Taiwan Strait: February 2025
    The PRC threatened Taiwan and its partners with live-fire military drills. Taiwan cracked down on Chinese influence and espionage. The Taiwanese Coast Guard boarded and detained the Chinese crew of a ghost ship implicated in a cable-cutting plot.
  • China
    Confronting the China Challenge, With Dmitri Alperovitch
    Podcast
    Dmitri Alperovitch, co-founder and chairman of Silverado Policy Accelerator, co-founder and former chief technology officer of cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, and author of World on the Brink: How America Can Beat China in the Race for the Twenty-First Century, sits down with James M. Lindsay to discuss the geopolitical rivalry between China and the United States, its impact on U.S. interests, and how the United States should respond.
  • Taiwan
    Why China-Taiwan Relations Are So Tense
    Differences over Taiwan’s status have fueled rising tensions between the island and mainland. Taiwan is the likeliest potential flash point in U.S.-China relations.
  • Taiwan
    Unpacking TSMC’s $100 Billion Investment in the United States
    TSMC’s $100 billion will significantly boost America’s semiconductor manufacturing industry but how it will shape US-Taiwan relations is an open question.
  • United States
    Emerging Global Threats: Putting America’s National Security First
    Charles Kupchan, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, along with Meaghan Mobbs, Brent Sadler, and Jacob Olidort, testified on Tuesday, February 25, 2025 to the House Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Military and Foreign Affairs. The focus of the hearing was “Emerging Global Threats: Putting America’s National Security First.”  Dr. Kupchan noted that there is merit in President Donald Trump’s effort to realign U.S. grand strategy; a changing international system as well as the shattering of the internationalist consensus in the United States necessitate adjustments to U.S. foreign policy. Trump’s more transactional and pragmatic brand of statecraft makes sense; he is right to try to broker a diplomatic end to Russia’s war against Ukraine. Trump also understands that globalization has left many workers behind and that open trade has benefited far too few Americans; he is appropriately looking to level the commercial playing field. He is heading in the right direction by seeking a solution to illegal immigration, responding to the clamor of an electorate that recognizes the country lacks a functioning immigration system. And Trump will be doing the nation a service if he can downsize the federal government, make it more efficient, and help reduce the national debt. Yet even if Trump’s America First foreign policy has considerable promise, it is also fraught with risk. His transactional approach to diplomacy is morphing into a stiff-necked unilateralism that undermines collective efforts where they are needed. His effort to limit U.S. entanglements abroad is leading to U.S. underreach, leaving Ukraine in the lurch and playing into the hands of adversaries. His reluctance to promote democracy overseas is being accompanied by disregard for democratic norms at home, potentially resulting in irreversible damage to the nation’s representative institutions. And in his determination to shake up the political establishment, Trump could break the U.S. government rather than reform it. A broken federal government will be in no shape to fix a broken America or a broken world. Charles A. Kupchan is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and professor of international affairs at Georgetown University in the Walsh School of Foreign Service and Department of Government.  
  • Taiwan
    Trump Is Making Taiwan More Vulnerable
    While Taiwan has largely stayed out of the spotlight, Trump’s actions have already made it more vulnerable.
  • China
    Six Takeaways From the Pentagon’s Report on China’s Military
    Despite ongoing and high-profile corruption issues, China’s military continues to rapidly modernize.
  • China
    Unpacking China’s “Four Red Lines” and Its Warning to Trump
    With his “four red lines,” Chinese leader Xi Jinping is attempting to set the terms for U.S.-China relations during a second Trump administration. 
  • China
    The China Challenge, With Liza Tobin and Jake Werner (Election 2024, Episode 6)
    Podcast
    Liza Tobin, senior director for economy at the Special Competitive Studies Project, and Jake Werner, acting director of the East Asia program at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, sit down with James M. Lindsay to discuss the challenges the next president will face navigating relations with China. This episode is the sixth in a special TPI series on the U.S. 2024 presidential election and is supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York.