Blockading Taiwan Could Be Painful for Taipei—and China

August 31, 2021 Topic: China's Navy Region: Asia Blog Brand: The Reboot Tags: Chinese NavyChinaTaiwanPLAXi JinpingBlockade

Blockading Taiwan Could Be Painful for Taipei—and China

Beijing probably fears outsiders will come to Taiwan’s aid when forced to choose.

The Cuban example suggests how Taiwan’s defenders can overcome not just a blockade but an amphibious onslaught. Beijing needs to win in a hurry, denying the island and its protectors time to react in force. Taipei mainly needs to stall for time. It needs to prolong any cross-strait war, reminding the international community it is a fighter while allowing the United States and potentially other rescuers time to marshal a response, fight their way to the scene of combat, and make a difference. Studying the American Civil War could pay dividends for Taiwan as well as China, showing the island’s guardians how to make trouble for their archfoe through diplomacy, law, and military strategy.

And troublemaking is what it’s all about. Strategic guidance from Corbett: make things worse to make them better. Use every resource at your disposal to make maritime operations galling for China—and for everyone else—and you may endure.

This article was republished for readers' interests.

James Holmes is J. C. Wylie Chair of Maritime Strategy at the Naval War College. The views voiced here are his alone.

Image: Reuters