Australian diplomat says war over Taiwan would make world ‘a radically different place’
Beijing sees Taiwan as part of China to be reunited by force if necessary. While many nations, including the US, do not officially acknowledge Taiwan as an independent state, they oppose any use of force to alter the existing status quo.
Taiwan and the US have no official diplomatic relationship, as Washington formally recognises Beijing but is bound by law to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself and is the island’s most important international backer.
“We would be foolish to ignore the increasing clarity of China’s military signalling, including the pattern of its most recent military exercises,” said Rudd, who was twice Australia’s prime minister in the previous decade.
Whether China acts will depend on its perception of the strength of US deterrence, he said.
The US recognised that if China was successful in annexing Taiwan it would impact US credibility and have “profound, and potentially irreversible effect on the perceived reliability of US alliances worldwide”, he said.
The US, mainland China and Taiwan have a common interest in avoiding open military confrontation on the future of Taiwan, said Rudd, a China scholar who was president of the Asia Society in New York until last year.
“The economic costs, domestic political impacts, and unknowable geostrategic consequences that such a war would generate would likely be of an order of magnitude that we have not seen since the second world war,” he said.
“Whatever the outcome [an American victory, a Chinese victory, or a bloody stalemate], the world is likely to become a radically different place after such a war than it was before.”