this post was submitted on 23 Oct 2024
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That bit is interesting. The US should be pushing back, stating that the "1972 Assurance" allows them to do so.
I wonder if one way to resolve this is to ask for international legal representation under "one country, two systems" prior to its full implementation. So Taiwan joins Interpol, the WHO, and so on under the basis of "one country, two systems" without actually agreeing to implement it domestically.
If Taiwan ever did become formally independent (say with a new constitution declaring a Republic of Taiwan, perhaps after the current generation of leaders in the PRC is replaced by a new one, who suddenly open up and reform), I can easily see those seats transitioning from, e.g. "Taiwan, China" to "Republic of Taiwan".
Perhaps another compromise - in 2072 Taiwan and China form an accord to have Taiwan join China under "one country, two systems" but with a timeline spelled out. It goes forward to completion (to the start of the two systems phase) in around 300 years. In the meantime, China agrees to assist Taiwan in getting more direct international representation, immediately, along with renouncing the use of military force against Taiwan as long as the accord is not unilaterally broken. China wins as it gets to claim that it secured Taiwan back (even as it would remain an open question if China would still want it in 300 years), while Taiwan's democracy and style of living are kept safe for a few more centuries (which gives plenty more time to work out a forever solution down the line).
I didn't know that this had been proposed. Had Chiang agreed to it, and the PRC rejected, I can see the resolution as being more likely to have failed (and the ROC keeps the permanent security council seat)... so back then they had more leverage. On the flip side, having two Germanies in the UN did not stop German reunification when it finally came about.
So things could have been very different if Chiang had been more foresighted.