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Description
Since the mid-1990s, China’s military modernization has focused on deterring Taiwan independence and preparing for a military response if deterrence fails. Given China’s assumption of U.S. intervention in a Taiwan conflict, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has been developing military capabilities to deter, delay, and disrupt U.S. military support operations. The 2008 election of Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou, however, has contributed to improved cross-strait economic and political cooperation and dramatically reduced the threat of Taiwan independence and war across the Taiwan Strait. Cooperation has included full restoration of direct shipping, flights, and mail across the strait, Taiwan’s participation in the World Health Assembly, regularized cross-strait negotiation mechanisms that have already reached several agreements, and the recent signing of the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement.
Document Type
Policy Brief
Publication Date
1-2011
Publication
Strategic Forum
Publisher
National Defense University Press
City
Washington, DC
Recommended Citation
Glosny, Michael A., "Getting Beyond Taiwan? Chinese Foreign Policy and PLA Modernization" (2011). Strategic Forums. 61.
https://digitalcommons.ndu.edu/strategic-forums/61