US-China rivalry and Taiwan's mainland policy : security, nationalism, and the 1992 consensus

著者

    • Chen, Dean P.

書誌事項

US-China rivalry and Taiwan's mainland policy : security, nationalism, and the 1992 consensus

Dean P. Chen

Palgrave Macmillan, c2017

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book examines changes in Taiwan's policies toward Mainland China under former Republic of China (ROC) President Ma Ying-jeou (2008-16) and considers their implications for US policy toward the Taiwan Strait. In recent years, the People's Republic of China (PRC)'s increasingly assertive foreign policy behaviors have heightened tensions with its regional neighbors as well as the United States. However, under the Kuomintang (KMT) administration of Ma Ying-jeou, Taiwan discounted Beijing's coercion and pursued rapprochement on the basis of the "1992 consensus," which was a tacit agreement reached between the KMT and Chinese Communist Party in 1992 that both Taiwan and the mainland belong to one China though that "China" is subjected to either side's different interpretations. The author of this volume analyzes why Taipei underreacted towards the security challenges posed by the PRC and chartered policies that sometimes went against the interests of Washington and its allies in the Asia-Pacific. The KMT was pushing for nation-building initiatives to rejuvenate the ROC's "one China" ruling legitimacy and to supplant pro-independence forces within Taiwan. The island's deeply fragmented domestic politics and partisanship have led policy elites to choose suboptimal strategy and, thereby, weakening its security position. The implications from this study are equally applicable to Taiwan's newly elected Democratic Progressive Party government that has taken off ice in 2016.

目次

1. Introduction: The Xi-Ma Summit Meeting and U.S. Interests across the Taiwan Strait 2. Politics beyond the Water's Edge: Neoclassical Realism 3. Defining One China 4. The KMT Rebuilds the ROC: Useful Foreign Foe and Enemies from Within 5. U.S. Strategic Ambiguity, Rising China, and Taiwan's Security 6. Tsai Ing-wen and the Weakening of the "1992 Consensus"

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