Sunday, March 20, 2022

The Morning: Is Taiwan next?

Russia's invasion of Ukraine could embolden China — or demonstrate the risks of invasion.

Good morning. China is watching Russia's invasion of Ukraine closely.

Taiwan's flag from a cafe window in Dongyin, Taiwan.Ann Wang/Reuters

A fragile peace

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has amplified fears that the world is teetering back to a Cold War-like era in which the most powerful countries compete for dominance.

That could mean not only Russia exerting control over Eastern Europe but also China imposing itself over East and Southeast Asia — particularly Taiwan.

China has laid claim to Taiwan since the island split off from the mainland in 1949 and has threatened to forcibly reunite the two. It views the issue as a top priority: Days after Russia's invasion, Chinese officials reiterated that they were committed to "resolving the Taiwan question." In a Friday call with President Biden about Russia's invasion, China's leader, Xi Jinping, seemed more concerned about the fate of Taiwan than the war in Ukraine.

China, like Russia, appears to see a void after Western powers pulled back from the world stage, sidelined by internal disputes and the failed U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In the West, a Cold War victory had convinced many that a new democratic world order would keep the peace — without realizing how fragile that peace really was.

"People forgot about great power politics," said Jennifer Lind, an expert on East Asia at Dartmouth College. "People had hoped we had transformed international politics, and we didn't."

But Russia's failure so far to overpower Ukraine, and the West's rush to punish and isolate Russia for its invasion, should make great or rising powers skeptical of similar incursions, experts said.

China, after all, has benefited from the relatively peaceful world order of recent decades; it transformed into the only real economic rival to the U.S. as the world became increasingly integrated. An invasion of Taiwan could disrupt that order and potentially isolate China from the global economy, as Russia's experience has shown.

So what happens in Taiwan will likely be influenced by what happens in Ukraine. If Russia succeeds in overtaking Ukraine, it increases the danger for Taiwan. If Russia ultimately retreats, or suffers lasting, damaging consequences, that could be good news for the island.

Why China might hesitate

Taiwanese military during a drill.Ritchie B. Tongo/EPA, via Shutterstock

Because Russia's invasion has gone poorly, Chinese officials are likely to be more cautious about sending troops into Taiwan, said Liang-chih Evans Chen at the Institute for National Defense and Security Research in Taiwan.

That would be a relief for Taiwan, an island of almost 24 million people with a strong liberal democracy — it is the only Asian government to legally allow same-sex marriages — and a modern economy.

Taiwan does not expect that it could outright defeat China's powerful military, especially without direct help from the U.S. Taiwan's aim, instead, is to make a war look so costly for China that it is deterred from invading.

The war in Ukraine has shown how this could play out. Ukrainian resistance has been fiercer than anyone expected — killing thousands of Russian troops, according to U.S. estimates. The same could prove true in Taiwan, where polls find that nearly three-quarters of the population is willing to fight a Chinese invasion.

The West's sweeping sanctions on Russia also suggest that an invasion of Taiwan could result in economic pain for China. Along with the weapons shipped to Ukraine, the sanctions show Western countries' willingness to support democracies that are under attack.

The West's resolve could go even further in Taiwan, with the possibility of U.S. forces directly intervening against an invasion. Biden has said American troops will not fight in Ukraine, but the U.S. keeps a deliberately vague line on Taiwan.

China's advantages

China has strengths that Russia does not. Its economy is far bigger and more diversified, cushioning the damage that sanctions could inflict. The countries that would stand to impose sanctions on China, from the U.S. to European nations to Japan, are generally more reliant on trade with China than they are on trade with Russia.

Unlike Ukraine, Taiwan is not recognized globally as an independent country — not even by the U.S. — potentially leading to questions about whether China's attack would be an invasion at all.

China also has an enormous military advantage, with about a million active-duty ground troops, compared with Taiwan's 88,000. (Although, unlike Russia, China would have to cross 100 miles of water to invade — a difficult, complex undertaking.)

The reaction to Russia's invasion has also exposed some limits in how far the West is willing to go, with countries declining to send troops to defend Ukraine. And the U.S.'s ambiguity on Taiwan leaves room for American forces to stay out of combat.

Most important, China has time: Any invasion of Taiwan could be years away, if it happens at all, experts said. That gives China time to build up its military, insulate its economy from possible sanctions, study what Russia got wrong in Ukraine and see whether Western resolve actually holds.

The return of great power politics, then, could hinge on the outcome of the war in Ukraine — and whether it was ultimately worth it from Russia's perspective.

State of the War

  • Russia made significant gains yesterday. It pushed into the center of the besieged city of Mariupol, moving closer to linking its forces in Ukraine's south with separatist allies in the east.
  • Mariupol is one of several places where Russian forces dealt blows to Ukraine's military. Russia also destroyed a barracks in the south, killing at least 40 marines in one of the deadliest attacks on Ukrainian forces since the war began, and took out a weapons depot in the west.
  • Russia said it had used hypersonic missiles to destroy the depot, but that could not be independently confirmed. Launching the missiles would be an escalation and the first use of such weapons in combat; they can travel at five times the speed of sound.
  • Russia appears to be digging in for a long fight around Kyiv, its biggest prize. Satellite imagery showed Russian forces establishing defensive positions.

More on Ukraine

  • Ukrainians placed 109 empty strollers on a public square to symbolize children killed in Russian bombardments.
  • The Biden administration is trying to help Ukraine without inciting broader conflict, leading to sometimes tortured policy distinctions.

NEWS

The Latest
Covid testing site workers in China disinfect each other.China Daily/Via Reuters
The Week Ahead
  • President Biden will travel to Brussels to meet on Thursday with NATO leaders about Ukraine.
  • Confirmation hearings start tomorrow for Ketanji Brown Jackson, Biden's Supreme Court nominee.
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission will vote tomorrow on a long-awaited rule that could require companies to disclose climate-related risks.
  • "American Song Contest," the U.S. response to Eurovision, premieres on Monday.
  • Today is both the spring equinox and Nowruz, the Persian new year.

FROM OPINION

  • Volodymyr Zelensky has showed us what true stature is, Maureen Dowd writes.
  • The way to defeat Vladimir Putin is to show him that he really is fighting against Ukraine, not against the West on Ukrainian land, Yaroslav Hrytsak argues.
  • Teachers confronting Covid's toll are teetering between cautious optimism and exhaustion, Kalyn Belsha, Lori Higgins and Melanie Asmar write.

The Sunday question: Should daylight saving time become permanent?

Yes, says Steve Calandrillo: More light in the evenings would reduce traffic accidents, crime and energy usage. Beth Ann Malow thinks permanent standard time, with light in the mornings, would be better for our health. And Josh Barro defends the status quo as a compromise that minimizes wasted daylight.

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MORNING READS

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By the Book: Nabokov helped the concert pianist Jeremy Denk connect with his father.

Times best sellers: Anne Applebaum's "Red Famine," about Stalin's impact on Ukraine, makes its first appearance as a paperback nonfiction best seller. See all our lists.

The Book Review podcast: J. Kenji López-Alt discusses his latest, "The Wok: Recipes and Techniques."

THE SUNDAY TIMES MAGAZINE

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Recommendation: Try spotting asteroids.

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Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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