Still waters run deep: Taiwan’s South China Sea strategy
China’s long-running territorial disputes regarding Taiwan and the South China Sea have become two of Asia’s biggest flashpoints. How to keep them from igniting into military conflict? This Clingendael Spectator series looks beyond the headlines of these flashpoints. In the third episode, Chong Ja Ian (National University of Singapore) examines Taiwan’s stance in the South China Sea and its apparent policy of remaining relatively quiet. What is behind Taipei’s silence?
Taiwan has been remarkably quiet regarding its claims in the South China Sea, whilst a geopolitical storm is brewing above these waters. Its silence is especially noteworthy given Taipei’s extensive claims. This stance becomes even more peculiar when considering the foundation of Taiwanese claims, which are based on a 1947 maritime chart crafted by the Republic of China (ROC).1 Notably, this same chart also forms the basis for the People’s Republic of China’s (PRC) so-called nine-dash line claims2 over the South China Sea.3
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The Republic of China
Taiwan is officially known as the Republic of China (ROC) today. The ROC was established in 1912 following the overthrow of the Qing Empire. At that time, Taiwan was under Japanese colonial rule. The ROC government began exercising jurisdiction over Taiwan in 1945 after Japan surrendered at the end of World War II. The administration retreated to Taiwan following its defeat in the Chinese Civil War in 1949, even as it claimed to be the legitimate government of China. Democratisation in the 1980s saw the end of authoritarian rule by the Chinese Nationalist Party (or Kuomintang; KMT) and acceptance of Chinese Communist Party rule over Mainland China.
The ROC-based Taiwanese claims include two extra lines near the Gulf of Tonkin, which the PRC removed following a settlement between Beijing and Hanoi in 1953.4 Apart from this adjustment, the ROC’s so-called eleven-dash line claim is identical to the PRC’s nine-dash line claim in the South China Sea. New maps of the PRC include an additional dashed line to the east of Taiwan, but this does not change PRC claims to the South China Sea, as this line pertains to the East China Sea.5
This analysis delves into the complexities of Taiwan’s stance in the South China Sea, shedding light on the peculiar silence that shrouds its extensive claims. While examining the foundation of these claims and their implications, this article does not focus on litigating Taiwanese maritime claims, or the PRC claims based on them. That complex task is best left to international lawyers and experts on the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Instead, this piece examines some of the potential security consequences for the region and the PRC arising from Taiwan’s official position on the South China Sea and its apparent policy of remaining relatively quiet.6
Taiwan’s silence on the matter may reflect a potential inability or unwillingness to vigorously pursue its claims due to limited capabilities. Additionally, Taiwan may want to avoid antagonising its Southeast Asian neighbours as well as opening a new front of confrontation with Beijing. Furthermore, Taipei’s reticence contributes to the ambiguity surrounding the nature of the PRC’s claims in the South China Sea.
Taiwan’s claims
When it comes to areas outside the South China Sea, Taiwan is not hesitant to asserts its territorial claims, even beyond PRC claims of ownership over the entirety of Taiwanese-controlled areas. For instance, Taipei periodically raised claims over the Senkaku – or Diaoyu/Diaoyutai7
– Islands and the waters in the East China Sea around them.
A notable incident occurred in 2012 when Taiwanese and Japanese coast guard vessels clashed over fishing rights near the Diaoyu(tai) Islands,8 ultimately leading to a 2014 Fisheries agreement between Taiwan and Japan, which regulated commercial fishing in the area.9 East China Sea claims are based on the ROC’s 1947 maritime chart as well, but were largely ignored until the discovery of potential oil and gas deposits in the region in 1971.10

Much like the Diaoyu(tai) dispute, conflicts in the South China Sea gained momentum in the 1980s after the discovery of potential oil and gas deposits in the 1970s.11 However, the South China Sea hosts major international shipping lanes, air routes and submarine cables connecting Northeast Asia with Southeast Asia and beyond.12 The potential to block access to the South China Sea could prove much more disruptive than the Diaoyu(tai) area. Contrary to the East China Sea, Taiwan maintains a presence in the South China Sea on Taiping (or Itu Aba),13 a remote feature with logistical challenges for garrison resupply.14 These factors shape the history and basis of Taiwan’s South China Sea claims.
Apart from the physical control of territory, there is the non-trivial matter of the legal basis for Taiwan’s claims in the South China Sea. Taiwan has never provided a clear explanation regarding the ROC’s stance as illustrated in the 1947 chart. The same lack of clarity applies to the PRC given that its claims rest on the ROC’s claims. The information in question is crucial as it would offer more transparency regarding the foundation of both Taiwan’s and the PRC’s claims, including their alignment with UNCLOS.
Of course, there is a real risk that official documents from Taiwan may critically undermine Beijing’s position, just as they might Taipei’s
Reasonable suspicion suggests that any original documents outlining the ROC’s South China Sea claims can be found in Taipei, given the relocation of key records from the former ROC capital of Nanking to Taipei at the end of Chinese Civil War in 1949. While Taiwan has provided some historical information about the ROC’s positions and claims, it has not disclosed the exact whereabouts and details of its eleven-dash line.15
Obtaining more definitive information from Taiwanese archives could have significant implications for both Taiwan and the PRC in relation to their South China Sea claims. If these documents offer a solid foundation consistent with UNCLOS, it could potentially strengthen Beijing’s and Taipei’s claims in comparison to those of other South China Sea claimants, such as the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei. Of course, Taipei and Beijing differ on who has rights to those claims. Conversely, if the documents do not provide any strong legal position according to current international law, or if no documentary explanation exists, this could weaken or even undermine Taipei’s and Beijing’s positions.
While it is important to note that disclosure alone may not entirely resolve the contemporary sovereignty disputes in the South China Sea, it could contribute to greater clarity and potentially foster some degree of mutual accommodation. If Taipei chooses to adhere to its current policy of limited disclosure, the ongoing disputes in the region might persist.

Vital for self-defence
For Beijing, gaining further clarity on ROC claims is not merely an academic or legal curiosity. Aside from asserting its sovereignty and establishing a legal basis to control maritime routes, air passages and undersea data connections, having undisputed ownership of the South China Sea under contemporary law would bestow Beijing with an extended strategic advantage.
This, in turn, would enable Beijing to legitimately push the activities of the United States, its allies, and partners further away from the Chinese coastline, thus creating a wider buffer zone in case of a confrontation. Prior to any potential confrontation, Beijing can also make stronger claims to restrict efforts by the US and its allies to monitor the PRC’s long coastline and military installations along it. Of course, there is a real risk that official documents from Taiwan may critically undermine Beijing’s position, just as they might Taipei’s.
It is unsurprising that Beijing views the ability to solidify its dominance over the South China Sea with greater legitimacy as an advantage
Additionally, increased control over the waters within the supposed first island chain16 would increase the PRC’s nuclear deterrent capability. China’s current nuclear ballistic submarine bases are located on Hainan Island. To reach the deeper and safer waters of the Pacific Ocean, these ballistic submarines must traverse the busy and relatively shallow waters of the South China Sea. This makes the maritime leg of the PRC’s nuclear triad more susceptible to interdiction, undermining the credibility of its second-strike capability. Such a vulnerability limits the PRC’s nuclear deterrence, raising significant concerns. Hence, the PRC asserts that the US and others are operating in what it claims to be its waters and airspace.17
The ability to block access to the South China Sea, backed by a legal justification, also strengthens the PRC’s capacity to exert pressure on Taiwan. Taiwan heavily relies on trade and imports energy as well as food through the South China Sea. In the event of a conflict over Taiwan, support from the US is likely to arrive from locations such as Japan, across the Pacific and possibly from the Indian Ocean and Middle East through the South China Sea. While bypassing the South China Sea is possible, it could result in strategically significant delays in the delivery of supplies, military support and efforts to break a blockade. Therefore, it is unsurprising that Beijing views the ability to solidify its dominance over the South China Sea with greater legitimacy as an advantage.

However, the PRC’s lack of clear legal legitimacy in the South China Sea means that the United States and others can freely conduct maritime passages, flights and communications in the region, in accordance with international law. This positions the US to better deter any aggressive actions by the PRC, while also allowing other South China Sea claimants, including Taiwan, to use these waters, the airspace above them and the seabed below, in compliance with international legal frameworks like UNCLOS. Moreover, Taiwan’s overlapping maritime claims also provide the island with a basis for resisting a PRC blockade, should Beijing try to argue that it is merely acting within its own territory.18
Behind Taipei’s silence
Considering the implications following from Taiwanese claims in the South China Sea, Taipei’s continuing silence amid the increasingly heated debates over ownership of these waters, the airspace above them and the seabed below seems puzzling. Without Taipei providing more information, the exact nature of both Taiwan’s and the PRC’s claims remains speculative.
Equally puzzling is the absence of comprehensive explanations and the presentation of evidence regarding Taiwan’s claims in the South China Sea by successive Taiwanese administrations, especially given the general expectation of transparency in a noisy democracy like Taiwan’s. The most Taipei has offered were statements reiterating its position and insisting that Taiping Island (Itu Aba) qualifies as an island, which can presumably generate an Exclusive Economic Zone under UNCLOS.19
Perhaps the most straightforward reason is the relative inattention of an electorate already grappling with numerous pressing issues, including the challenge of preserving autonomy in the face of PRC pressure.
Taipei’s ongoing silence regarding the nature and extent of its claims is a noteworthy and often underestimated issue
Another possible explanation is that Taipei recognises that taking a clear stance and revealing any documentary evidence for its claims could upset Taiwan’s relationship with its neighbours. There might be evidence to suggest that the ROC did not receive any recognition for its claims from previous governments of the current claimant states, such as British, French, American or even Dutch colonial administrations. This lack of recognition could weaken the positions of other claimants and set them against a Taiwan that is already in a diplomatically marginalised and precarious position.
An alternative scenario is that more clarity from Taiwan could undermine the PRC’s position and invite additional pressure from Beijing, something Taipei would rather not deal with at a time of already heightened tensions.
A further possibility is that Taipei may have limited legal evidence to support its claims. Admitting such a reality could expose any Taiwanese administration in office to domestic criticism, with accusations of being weak on sovereignty claims. This further complicates a situation where Taiwan’s status already faces serious challenges from a powerful PRC. Any political party in office in Taipei would likely want to avoid further domestic disputes.
While Taipei could attempt to negotiate concessions from Beijing for not undermining PRC claims, such an arrangement would remain concealed from direct observation, and Taiwan would bear the risk of potential backtracking by the PRC. In any case, Taipei has few incentives to be open about a lack of evidence for the old ROC position over the South China Sea.
An underestimated issue
Taipei’s continued claims on the old ROC’s maritime borders may provide some basis to assert Taiwan as a successor state to the ROC. For the PRC, these circumstances underscore Taiwan’s status as an integral part of a China that should be under control of the Chinese Communist Party.
For the small pro-unification segment of Taiwan’s population, maintaining the old ROC claims ties Taiwan to China, akin to the control of Quemoy and Matsu.20 In contrast, those with less inclination towards unification may see Taiwan’s stance over the South China Sea as an assertion of its sovereignty. Others might interpret Taiwan’s claims over the South China Sea as a remnant from the ROC era that should be discarded, allowing Taiwan to chart its own future.
The lack of progress in its policies regarding the South China Sea may simply reflect an acceptance of the existing status quo, where Taiwan holds de facto but not full de jure statehood within its own polity.21
Taiwan is not only a concerned participant and co-disputant in the competing claims over the South China Sea; the outcomes of the disputes carry significant consequences, not only for Taipei and its relations with neighbouring countries but also for the PRC. Therefore, Taipei’s ongoing silence regarding the nature and extent of its claims, especially after the end of martial law and the process of democratisation in the 1980s, is a noteworthy and often underestimated issue.
This behaviour is uncharacteristic for an open and competitive political system like Taiwan’s, even considering the usual lack of public attention to foreign policy. Given the general lack of political appetite in Taiwan and internationally to comprehensively address the historical ROC positions on territorial matters, the world will likely have to live with more contentiousness, confusion and uncertainty over the South China Sea.
- 1Taiwan is officially known as the Republic of China (ROC) today. The ROC was established in 1912 following the overthrow of the Qing Empire. At that time, Taiwan was under Japanese colonial rule. The ROC government began exercising jurisdiction over Taiwan in 1945 after Japan surrendered at the end of World War II. The administration retreated to Taiwan following its defeat in the Chinese Civil War in 1949, even as it claimed to be the legitimate government of China. Democratisation in the 1980s saw the end of authoritarian rule by the Chinese Nationalist Party (or Kuomintang; KMT) and acceptance of Chinese Communist Party rule over Mainland China.
- 2This area extends from the southern coast of Taiwan, past the Philippines, the Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak, and Brunei to the east, north of Indonesia’s Natuna islands to the south, and then northward off the east coasts of peninsula Malaysia and Vietnam to Hainan.
- 3Samuel Hui, ‘The evolution of American South China Sea policy: from supporting the Republic of China’s Eleven-Dash Line position to declaring China’s Nine-Dash Line is illegal’, The News Lens, 12 August 2020; Ministry of Foreign Affairs, ‘ROC Government Reiterates Its Position on South China Sea Issues’, 31 October 2015.
- 4Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China, ‘Introduction of the circumstances of the China-Vietnam Gulf of Tunkin border delimitation agreement’, 25 December 2000; Zhen-Gang Ji, ‘The South China Sea Island China Gave Away’, The Diplomat, 19 August 2019.
- 5Map Technology Review Center, Ministry of Natural Resources, 'Standard map service’, 2023.
- 6For a list of Taiwan official statements on the South China Sea, see: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of China (Taiwan), ‘Statements and responses concerning the sovereignty of the South China Sea islands’, version 18 October 2023. English alternative: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of China (Taiwan), ‘South China Sea’, version 12 October 2023.
- 7The Senkaku Islands are also known as the Diaoyu Islands in China and as the Diaoyutai Islands in Taiwan.
- 8Shannon Sant, ‘Japan, Taiwan Trade Water Cannon Fire Near Disputed Islands’, Voice of America, 25 September 2012.
- 9Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of China (Taiwan), ‘Fishery agreement between the Association of East Asian Relations and the Exchange Association’, 29 April 2013; Chou Chiu-long, ‘The meaning and boundary delimitation influence of the Taiwan-Japan fishery agreement’, Coast Guard Administration, Republic of China (Taiwan), 23 January 2014.
- 10Gisela Greiger, ‘Sino-Japanese Controversy over the Senkaku/Diaoyu/Diaoyutai Islands’, European Parliamentary Research Service, July 2021.
- 11Council on Foreign Relations, ‘China’s Maritime Disputes, 1895-2020’, version 18 October 2023.
- 12National Bureau of Asian Research, ‘Maritime Awareness Project’, version 18 October 2023.
- 13Center for Strategic and International Studies, ‘Itu Aba Island’, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, version 18 October 2023.
- 14Chang Hao, ‘Research into the joint defence of Taiping Island by the National Army and Coast Guard Administration’, Navy Professional Journal, vol. 25, no. 2, 1 April 2018.
- 15Academia Historica, ‘Special exhibition of historical materials of China’s southern borders in the republican period’, 2014; Li Tong, ‘Taiwan holds South China Sea archives exhibition: exhibits important files on South China Sea sovereignty’, Radio Free Asia, 21 October 2014.
- 16The first island chain is the line of islands stretching from the Japanese archipelago through Taiwan, the Philippine archipelago, Borneo and the Indonesian archipelago. They are the islands closest to the coast of the Asian mainland. The so-called second island chain stretches east from Japan through Guam and Micronesia, while the third island chain includes the Aleutian, Hawaiian Islands, Samoa, and Fiji. Control of the first island chain can complicate or enable the PRC access to the Pacific Ocean. See: Andrew S. Erickson and Joel Wuthnow, ‘Barriers, Springboards and Benchmarks: China Conceptualizes the Pacific “Island Chains”’, The China Quarterly, 225, 1-22, 2016.
- 17Li Shangfu, ‘Fifth Plenary Session, 20th Asia Security Summit, Shangri-La Dialogue’, International Institute for Strategic Studies, 4 June 2023.
- 18The legality of the issue does not diminish the fact that any disruption to trade and communication routes in the South China Sea due to a cross-Strait contingency – ranging from quarantine or a blockade to low-level conflict and war – could have profound global consequences.
- 19Mainland Affairs Council, Republic of China (Taiwan), ‘MAC Releases Solemn Statement on the South China Sea Arbitration Case’, 12 July 2016; Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of China (Taiwan), ‘Statement on the South China Sea’, 7 July 2015; Office of the President, Republic of China (Taiwan), ‘President visits our country’s Taiping Island, Nansha and makes statement’, 28 January 2016.
- 20These two groups of Taiwan-ruled islands just off the southeast Chinese coast, are formally part of Fujian province according to both the PRC and ROC. Geographically closer to the PRC than Taiwan, proponents of unification view these islands as embodying Taiwan’s political link to a larger Chinese polity. See: Nancy Bernkopf Tucker, ‘China and America: 1941-1991’, Foreign Affairs, 70(5), 75–92, 1991.
- 21Election Study Center, National Chengchi University, ‘Taiwan Independence vs Unification with the Mainland (1994/12 - 2022/12)’, 13 January 2023.
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International Expert member of Global Order in Geneva.
Good Research .
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