Practical information
The United States is the linchpin of Taiwan’s security. Under Donald Trump’s presidency, as tensions with the People’s Republic of China grew, the US increasingly took steps to signal ever more clearly its commitment to supporting and defending Taiwan, a trend that seems to have continued somewhat under Joe Biden’s leadership. In recent months, Tokyo has also become more visibly engaged in declaring its commitment to ensuring peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait. This webinar will explore these recent trends, analyse the strength of ties between these three actors, and the implications for the future of stability in the Taiwan Strait and for regional and global peace and security more broadly.
Speakers:
- I-Chung Lai, President, Prospect Foundation
- Shin Kawashima, Professor of International Relations, Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, University of Tokyo
- J Michael Cole, author, journalist, consultant and Senior Fellow, Macdonald-Laurier Institute
Chair: Céline Pajon, Research Fellow, Head of Japan Research, Ifri
Video replay of the debates
Other events
Georgia's Authoritarian Turn and Its Foreign Policy Implications
The Georgian state is currently undergoing a critical phase of democratic decline, marked by the domination of the Georgian Dream party and an authoritarian drift that is disrupting its political institutions.
The New Nuclear Instabilities on the Korean Peninsula
From the growing size and diversification of the North Korean nuclear arsenal, and an open rhetoric in favor of nuclear proliferation in the South because of the loss of credibility of U.S. extended deterrence, the Peninsula is facing raising nuclear tensions.