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Will China Split Taiwan?

After the Passing of the "Anti-Secession Law"

SWP Comment 2005/C 17, 15.04.2005, 4 Pages Research Areas

By passing an "Anti-Secession Law" in March 2005, China's National People's Congress could have contributed to a further polarization of Taiwan's political landscape. In late March, the island's main opposition party made an attempt to wrench back the initiative on mainland policy by negotiating a broadening of economic and other relations in Peking. In Taipei, the administration of Taiwan's president, Chen Shuibian, castigated the initiative as a sellout of national interests and launched a review of the entire economic relationship with the People's Republic of China (PRC). Both the government and the opposition are running considerable risks with a Taiwanese population that is at the same time opposed to the "Anti-Secession Law" and supportive of a decrease in tensions across the Taiwan Strait.