Talks from the Hoover Institution

Resilient Realists: How Taiwan Navigates Its Future In A Turbulent World

8 snips
Mar 4, 2026
Dr. Hung-mao Tien, former foreign minister of Taiwan and current INPR president, offers a concise perspective on Taiwan’s strategic role. He discusses the island’s geostrategic position, semiconductor-driven tech leverage, rising PRC coercion tactics, and the case for deeper U.S.–Taiwan–Japan cooperation. Short takes on democratic resilience and the dilemmas open societies face round out the conversation.
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INSIGHT

Taiwan's Location Protects Global Sea Lanes

  • Control of Taiwan would threaten freedom of navigation along the Asia sea lanes that carry $5–6 trillion in trade annually.
  • Hung-mao Tien warns China claiming Taiwan as internal waters would make free passage problematic through the First Island Chain.
INSIGHT

China Is Emphasizing Subversion Over Immediate Invasion

  • Beijing is shifting from preparing overt military invasion to emphasis on united front, cyber, and information operations to create internal political chaos in Taiwan.
  • Tien flags 2026 as a sensitive year around US and Taiwan elections where limited military action plus political subversion could be tested.
ANECDOTE

1996 Carrier Deployment Became A Signal Of U.S. Resolve

  • James O. Ellis recounted the 1996 Taiwan Strait crisis when his carrier group was directed near Taiwan as a signal of U.S. resolve.
  • He shares an intelligence officer's joke that his flagship USS Independence was chosen for symbolic effect.
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