How can Taiwan and China be unified in a way that preserves and protects Taiwan's natural rights and freedoms?
Unification of Taiwan and China is possible without triggering a US-China war, but only if it is fundamentally redesigned as a voluntary, treaty-based confederation. This framework must hard-code individual rights, strictly limit central authority, preserve Taiwan’s de facto autonomy, and include robust, self-enforcing mechanisms that make violations costly without requiring military escalation. Anything less—especially a model that allows Beijing to impose centralized control or erode liberties—would be rejected by Taiwan and heighten the very war risk it aims to reduce.
Core Principles (Techno-Libertarian Foundation)
A durable agreement must rest on these pillars:
- Non-aggression and genuine consent: No political arrangement imposed by force or coercion. Major changes require repeated, high-threshold referendums in Taiwan (e.g., 60%+ approval across multiple votes spaced years apart).
- Radical decentralization: Taiwan retains near-total control over domestic policy, policing, education, speech, media, digital governance, currency, taxes, immigration, and courts.
- Inviolable negative rights: Explicitly enumerated rights that no union body can override, with supremacy in Taiwan.
- Exit rights and competition: A clear, legal pathway for Taiwan to withdraw if rights are breached—rights without exit options are illusory.
- Self-enforcing verification: Replace trust with automatic economic and legal penalties, neutral arbitration, transparency technologies, and third-party guarantees.
Proposed Structure: Confederal Union of China (CUC)
The CUC would function as a loose confederation, not a unitary state.
- Taiwan’s status: A fully autonomous “constituent polity” with its own constitution, democratically elected government, independent military and coast guard, currency, legal system, internet regime, and immigration controls. No mainland security, intelligence, or censorship organs may operate on Taiwanese soil.
- Limited union powers: Strictly enumerated and narrow—customs union, harmonized cross-strait transport and trade standards, joint external trade negotiations, and a minimal secretariat. All other powers remain with Taiwan or the mainland. Any union measure affecting civil liberties in Taiwan requires Taiwan’s explicit consent plus a supermajority in a bicameral union council (with a permanent Taiwanese veto).
- Supraconstitutional Rights Charter (supreme in Taiwan): Freedom of speech, press, assembly, association, religion, due process, independent judiciary, private property, free movement of people and capital, encryption, digital privacy, open internet, and protection from warrantless surveillance or political persecution. These rights take precedence over any conflicting union or mainland law within Taiwan.
- Dispute resolution: A balanced Constitutional Court (equal Taiwanese and mainland judges plus neutral jurists from countries like Switzerland, Singapore, or New Zealand) for rights cases. Independent international arbitration (loser-pays) for economic disputes.
- Security arrangements: Taiwan keeps its full defense capabilities. No PLA bases, garrisons, or operational control on Taiwan. Mutual missile and force deployment caps near the Strait, verified by sensors, drones, and neutral observers. Robust hotlines, deconfliction protocols, and joint maritime/air safety rules.
- Symbols and identity: Dual passports permitted. Separate Olympic, cultural, and sports teams. Taiwan retains practical participation in international organizations under agreed names, with Beijing’s formal, treaty-embedded consent.
Credible Enforcement Mechanisms (Critical for Deterring War)
Enforcement is the linchpin—paper agreements fail without teeth.
- Automatic economic triggers: Trade preferences, investment access, aviation rights, financial facilities, and supply-chain benefits held in escrow. Independent certification of compliance unlocks them; breaches automatically snap them back, imposing immediate, calibrated costs.
- Third-party guarantors: The US, Japan, EU members, and ASEAN states provide economic and legal guarantees (not military). Certified violations trigger coordinated sanctions, export controls, or market access restrictions.
- Transparency and technology: All court rulings, inspections, and compliance data published on tamper-evident blockchain-style platforms. Multi-signature authorization required to release escrowed benefits.
- Exit clause: Upon court-certified, material, and uncured rights violations (e.g., after 120 days), Taiwan can trigger a binding exit referendum. High thresholds (e.g., 60% overall and majorities in key regions) lead to recognized, orderly separation with pre-agreed transition plans executed by guarantors.
Role of the United States and Allies
- Formally recognize the confederation and commit to opposing any forcible change by either side.
- Tie arms sales and security support to verifiable compliance: sales reduce with successful de-escalation but automatically resume on breaches.
- Offer staged economic incentives (market access, tech cooperation, supply-chain resilience funds) that pause on violations.
- Provide neutral observers for monitoring and crisis management.
Sequenced 10–15 Year Roadmap
- Years 0–2: Mutual renunciation of force, incident protocols, military de-escalation near the Strait, joint disaster response, and public drafting of the treaty and Rights Charter.
- Years 2–4: Dual referendums (Taiwan and mainland approval with high thresholds). Stand up institutions, launch pilot programs (customs, mobility, professional licensing).
- Years 4–8: Phased economic integration, security confidence-building (missile caps, buffers), rights court operations, and escrow mechanisms.
- Years 8–15: Deeper optional integration (common travel, infrastructure) only if compliance metrics remain strong for consecutive years. Regular public reviews.
Sample Treaty Language (Preamble and Key Articles)
Preamble Recognizing the equal dignity and inalienable rights of all people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait, determined to settle differences through peaceful means alone, and desiring a framework that promotes shared prosperity while safeguarding liberty, the Parties hereby establish the Confederal Union of China.
Article 1 – Nature The CUC is a voluntary confederation of distinct polities. Powers not expressly delegated remain with the constituent polities.
Article 3 – Rights Charter The enumerated rights—including freedoms of speech, press, assembly, due process, property, encryption, and digital privacy—are inviolable within Taiwan and supreme over any Union or external act.
Article 10 – Exit A certified, material, and persistent breach of the Rights Charter, uncured within the stipulated period, authorizes Taiwan to conduct a binding exit referendum. A successful vote triggers orderly separation supported by the guarantors.
New Suggestions for Completeness
- Economic and innovation incentives: Create a joint “Strait Innovation Fund” for semiconductor, AI, biotech, and green tech R&D, with profits and IP protections ring-fenced for Taiwan-based entities. Automatic revenue-sharing formulas tied to compliance.
- Cultural and identity safeguards: Explicit protections for Taiwanese identity, language, history education, and cultural institutions. No mandatory “patriotic education” or media content restrictions in Taiwan.
- Environmental and health cooperation: Joint standards for air quality, fisheries, pandemic response, and climate resilience—low-politics areas that build trust.
- Leadership transition resilience: Treaty provisions that survive changes in Beijing or Taipei leadership, with automatic review triggers on major political shifts.
- Public engagement: Mandatory, ongoing town halls, civil society input, and independent polling in Taiwan. International observers for all referendums.
- Metrics dashboard: Public, real-time compliance scorecard (rights cases, military movements, economic flows) maintained by neutrals.
Why This Could Succeed (and Why Alternatives Fail)
This model succeeds if both sides see net gains—economic integration, reduced war risk, preserved identity—and violations carry automatic, non-military pain. It fails if Beijing demands garrisons, censorship authority, or revocable autonomy, or if Taiwan rejects any union framework outright. Without ironclad guardrails and exit options, no deal will gain Taiwanese consent.
Practical first steps: Start small with high-trust pilots (joint search-and-rescue, fisheries enforcement, digital customs, professional credentials). Publish a full draft treaty for global and Taiwanese civil society review. Agree on an incidents protocol with priced penalties.
Bottom line: Centralized “unification” under Beijing’s current system is incompatible with Taiwan’s freedoms and a proven war risk. A voluntary, rights-first, self-enforcing confederation offers a narrow but credible path to peace with dignity. It is ambitious, but far more realistic than hoping the status quo holds indefinitely or that military deterrence alone prevents catastrophe. Serious negotiations should begin with the least controversial elements to test intentions.
In addition:
Here's additional context, historical background, expert perspectives, and current realities to complement the confederation framework we discussed. This draws from real-world proposals, Beijing's positions, Taiwanese responses, and geopolitical analyses as of 2026.
Beijing's Official Position: "One Country, Two Systems" (and Why It's a Non-Starter for Most Taiwanese)
China has long promoted "One Country, Two Systems" (1C2S) as the model for unification, originally conceived with Taiwan in mind in the 1980s but first applied to Hong Kong and Macau. Under this, Taiwan would become a special administrative region with high autonomy, its own military, economic system, and way of life—for a time—but ultimate sovereignty rests with Beijing.
- Xi Jinping has pushed a "Two Systems" Taiwan Plan, promising protections for property, religion, and rights, while emphasizing peaceful reunification as the priority.
- However, post-2019 Hong Kong crackdowns have destroyed credibility in Taiwan. Polls and statements from Taiwanese leaders (including President Lai Ching-te in 2025) show near-universal rejection: "Taiwan does not want China's 'one country, two systems'." No major Taiwanese party supports it.
Taiwan views 1C2S as a path to eventual full absorption and loss of democracy, not genuine autonomy.
Historical Taiwanese Confederation Ideas (and Beijing's Rejection)
Confederation-style proposals have come mostly from Taiwan's Kuomintang (KMT) side over the decades:
- In the early 2000s, KMT figures like Lien Chan and Su Chi floated transitional confederation ideas—peaceful coexistence under one roof, with high autonomy, as a step toward eventual closer ties.
- James Soong (2000) suggested something EU-like with a non-aggression pact.
- These were framed as interim arrangements preserving Taiwan's democracy while addressing Beijing's "One China" concerns.
Beijing has consistently rejected confederation. It argues Taiwan is not a separate sovereign entity that could enter such a pact—everything must proceed under the "One China Principle," where Taiwan is already part of China. A confederation would imply equality between two states, which China sees as a step toward permanent division.
Some mainland Chinese scholars (fringe/progressive voices) have discussed federation ideas allowing dual constitutions under a loose federal structure, but these remain academic and not official policy.
Why Peaceful Unification Under Current Terms Is Seen as Low-Feasibility
Experts highlight structural barriers:
- Taiwanese identity and democracy: Decades of democratization have created a distinct Taiwanese identity. Most prefer the status quo or de facto independence. Unification polls show very low support for immediate or forced integration.
- Distrust: Hong Kong's fate, military coercion, and cyber/espionage campaigns erode confidence in any Beijing promises.
- Expert consensus: Beijing wants unification but lacks a coherent near-term strategy beyond pressure and waiting. Few see peaceful resolution soon without major changes (e.g., China democratizing—which still might not suffice due to identity differences).
Military risks remain real: blockades, gray-zone tactics, or accidents are more likely than full invasion in the near term, but tensions stay elevated.
Current Dynamics (as of mid-2026)
- Tensions and coercion: Frequent PLA drills, ADIZ incursions, coast guard activities around Kinmen/Matsu, and cable-cutting incidents continue. Large-scale exercises (e.g., late 2025) simulated blockades.
- Engagement attempts: KMT opposition leaders have met Xi Jinping, pushing economic ties and the 1992 Consensus. Beijing offers integration incentives (e.g., for offshore islands), but Taiwan's DPP government insists on government-to-government equality and rejects unification rhetoric.
- US role: Arms sales, economic partnerships, and strategic ambiguity persist. Any confederation deal would need credible US/international guarantees to be viable.
Additions/Refinements to the Confederation Model
To make it more robust and realistic:
- Sunset/review clauses: Automatic 20–30 year reviews with referendum options in Taiwan to adapt or exit.
- Economic asymmetry protections: Taiwan-specific IP safeguards, semiconductor supply-chain ring-fencing, and vetoes on union-level industrial policy.
- Digital and info sovereignty: Explicit bans on mainland social credit systems, algorithms, or content mandates in Taiwan—perhaps with a "Great Firewall exemption" verified by neutrals.
- Demographic safeguards: Limits on mainland migration/residency to prevent gradual demographic shifts.
- International embedding: Link the treaty to broader frameworks (e.g., observer status in forums like the CPTPP or WTO enhancements) to give Taiwan upside.
- Public metrics: Annual independent (e.g., Swiss or Japanese-led) audits of rights compliance, published globally.
Realism check: This kind of deep, rights-hardwired confederation would require a fundamental shift in Beijing's thinking—away from centralized CCP control toward genuine power-sharing. That's unlikely under the current system, as it challenges core Leninist principles. It could appeal more if China faces internal reforms or economic pressures that make compromise attractive.
Bottom line: The confederation model remains a thoughtful hypothetical for de-risking war while protecting freedoms—more protective than 1C2S—but faces steep political hurdles. Real progress likely starts with small, trust-building steps (economic pilots, deconfliction pacts, cultural exchanges) rather than grand treaties. The status quo of deterrence + ambiguity has held for decades, but rising capabilities on all sides make creative diplomacy increasingly urgent.
Finally
Game theory analysis:
First (game-theory verdict): Taiwan has no dominant strategy in this strategic triangle (Taiwan–PRC–U.S.). Under standard models (Chicken/brinkmanship with incomplete information), any unconditional move toward confederation or formal independence can trigger very large downside payoffs that depend on how Beijing and Washington respond. Given current payoffs and credibility constraints, Taiwan’s maximin/robust (i.e., best worst‑case) strategy is to maintain de facto independence and the status quo while raising deterrence and resilience, deepening diversified ties, and keeping de‑escalatory channels open. There is no pure dominant strategy; confederation is dominated by the status‑quo‑plus approach because Beijing cannot credibly commit to preserve Taiwanese autonomy, and public opinion in Taiwan heavily penalizes such concessions. (chinadaily.com.cn)
Why there is no dominant strategy
- Commitment problems: Beijing’s 2005 Anti‑Secession Law authorizes “non‑peaceful means” if Taipei moves toward de jure independence (or if peaceful options are “completely exhausted”). That makes “declare independence” strictly unsafe. Symmetrically, “accept union/confederation” is unsafe because Beijing’s credibility to preserve a high‑autonomy arrangement was damaged by the way Hong Kong’s autonomy was curtailed after the 2020 National Security Law. In game‑theory terms, the counterparty cannot make a credible commitment that would change Taiwan’s expected payoff from union. (chinadaily.com.cn)
- Audience costs and domestic payoffs: Repeated, high‑quality polling shows very large majorities in Taiwan oppose “one country, two systems” and prefer some version of the status quo; any government choosing confederation would incur massive domestic audience costs, reducing the political payoff of that move. (mac.gov.tw)
- Escalation risk: PLA exercises that simulate blockades, strikes, and encirclement raise the expected cost of missteps. That keeps Chicken‑like payoffs high on the “collision” outcome and limits the attractiveness of bold commitments by Taipei. (scmp.com)
- Third‑party coupling: U.S. policy under the Taiwan Relations Act is to provide “arms of a defensive character” and maintain capacity to resist coercion—without a security treaty or support for Taiwan’s formal independence. Taiwan’s payoff thus depends on a strategically ambiguous third player, eliminating dominance of any single pure strategy. (2021-2025.state.gov)
Should Taiwan form a confederation with China?
- From a mechanism‑design perspective, a confederation could only be rational for Taiwan if: (i) sovereignty and veto rights were symmetric; (ii) enforcement was external and credible; and (iii) domestic voters consented by very high thresholds. None of these conditions exist today, and Beijing’s current stance rejects arrangements implying dual sovereignty. Empirically, trust in high‑autonomy promises is low post‑Hong Kong NSL; public opinion in Taiwan strongly rejects such frameworks. Hence, a confederation is strictly dominated (lower expected value) by the status‑quo‑plus strategy. (academic.oup.com)
Why “status‑quo‑plus” yields a better expected value
- Deterrence by denial reduces Beijing’s expected payoff from coercion while keeping Taiwan’s escalatory signals below China’s “casus belli” thresholds under the Anti‑Secession Law—matching the logic of brinkmanship games where you lower the opponent’s incentive to swerve you while avoiding irreversible moves. PLA exercises demonstrate blockade and strike playbooks; denial capabilities and societal resilience raise Taiwan’s survival payoffs under those scenarios. (scmp.com)
- Economic diversification shifts long‑run payoffs. China (incl. Hong Kong) remains a major partner, but the share is declining as Taiwan’s exports pivot to the U.S./others; Mainland‑only trade’s share dipped, and Beijing has already used ECFA tariff suspensions and targeted import bans as coercion—evidence that over‑reliance worsens Taiwan’s bargaining position. (ws.mac.gov.tw)
- Leverage from critical industries: Taiwan’s semiconductor position increases international willingness to bear costs to preserve stability, which indirectly supports deterrence. TrendForce data show Taiwan/TSMC leading advanced‑node capacity and market share in 2024–2025. That increases third‑party coupling to Taiwan’s security and raises the expected costs to the system of conflict. (trendforce.com)
What Taiwan should do (a game‑theoretic “status‑quo‑plus” playbook)
- Preserve ambiguity, avoid dominance‑seeking moves: No unilateral declaration of independence or binding confederation framework; keep options open in a repeated game with incomplete information.
- Raise deterrence by denial and resilience
- Continue the “porcupine” emphasis (mobile anti‑ship/air defenses, coastal missiles, sea mines, drones, dispersed basing, camouflage/decoys) and stockpiles for a blockade scenario; these investments reduce Beijing’s expected success and raise the price of coercion. Align with the TRA framework for defensive arms. (2021-2025.state.gov)
- Harden society: civil defense, resilient power/undersea cables/satellite comms, and port/airport repair capacity to blunt blockade/strike payoffs signaled by recent PLA drills. (scmp.com)
- Diversify economic exposure and sanction‑proof critical sectors
- Keep shifting export orientation toward the U.S., Japan, EU, and ASEAN while reducing single‑market fragility that Beijing has leveraged (ECFA suspensions; agricultural bans). Use WTO‑consistent instruments and trade agreements to lock in alternatives. (trade.gov)
- Deepen external coupling without formal tripwires
- Expand practical security cooperation, exercises, and technology ties with the U.S. and regional partners who have publicly prioritized peace and stability across the Strait (e.g., U.S.–Japan–Philippines statements), reinforcing extended‑deterrence credibility without crossing formal‑independence red lines. (mofa.go.jp)
- Keep risk‑reducing channels to Beijing open
- Hotlines, fishery/air‑safety MOUs, limited confidence‑building measures, and narrowly scoped economic facilitation that doesn’t create veto points over Taiwan’s security policy—all reduce miscalculation in a repeated game.
- Anchor all large constitutional moves to supermajoritarian consent
- In game‑theory terms, raising the domestic threshold for irreversible moves credibly commits future leaders against opportunistic deviations that could trigger catastrophic responses (this increases Taipei’s bargaining credibility vis‑à‑vis both Beijing and Washington).
Summary recommendation
- Given today’s payoffs and credibility constraints, the confederation option is dominated; the unconditionally best reachable outcome for Taiwan is a robust “status‑quo‑plus”: maintain de facto independence, upgrade denial‑based deterrence and societal resilience, diversify economic ties, and institutionalize de‑escalation channels. This maximizes Taiwan’s minimum payoff while preserving upside should Beijing’s preferences or global alignments shift. There is no dominant strategy across all states of the world, but this strategy is maximin‑optimal under current conditions. (chinadaily.com.cn)
Select sources for key facts
- Anti‑Secession Law authorizing “non‑peaceful means.” (chinadaily.com.cn)
- Hong Kong NSL’s impact on “one country, two systems” credibility. (papers.ssrn.com)
- Taiwanese public opinion opposing “one country, two systems” and favoring status quo. (mac.gov.tw)
- PLA blockade/encirclement exercises around Taiwan in 2024–2025. (scmp.com)
- U.S. policy: defensive arms and capacity to resist coercion; no support for formal independence. (2021-2025.state.gov)
- Trade exposure and ECFA suspensions/coercive trade examples; shift in trade structure. (scmp.com)
- Semiconductor leverage (TSMC/advanced‑node leadership). (trendforce.com)
Learn more:
- Anti-Secession Law adopted by NPC (full text)
- Mainland Affairs Council, Republic of China (Taiwan)
- Mainland China kicks off PLA blockade around Taiwan, 3 days after William Lai speech | South China Morning Post
- Department Press Briefing – July 21, 2022 - United States Department of State
- China–Taiwan relations and the 1992 consensus, 2000−2008 | International Relations of the Asia-Pacific | Oxford Academic
- 兩岸經濟統計月報
CROSS STRAIT ECONOMIC STATISTICS MONTHLY3 - Trendforce: Foundry Capacity Market Share of Advanced Process to Decline in Taiwan, Korea until 2027, While US on the Rise
- Taiwan - Market Overview
- Japan-U.S.-Philippines Summit | Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan
- Can Hong Kong Remain a Liberal Enclave within China? Analysis of the Hong Kong National Security Law by Cora Chan :: SSRN
- Mainland China suspends tariff arrangements on 134 items under Taiwan trade deal | South China Morning Post