Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of China (Taiwan)

03/08/2026 | Press release | Archived content

Foreign Minister Lin strongly denounces Chinese Foreign Minister Wang’s fallacious claims regarding Taiwan

Foreign Minister Lin strongly denounces Chinese Foreign Minister Wang's fallacious claims regarding Taiwan

  • Date:2026-03-08
  • Data Source:Department of Policy Planning

March 8, 2026

No. 070

Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung firmly refutes erroneous remarks made by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi at a press conference for the fourth session of the 14th National People's Congress, including false claims that China has sovereignty over Taiwan and that unification of the two sides of the Taiwan Strait is an inevitable historical process and an international trend.

Minister Lin reiterates that the Republic of China (Taiwan) has always been an independent and sovereign country. Neither it nor the People's Republic of China (PRC) is subordinate to the other. Whether in terms of historical truths, objective reality, or international law, Taiwan's sovereignty has never belonged to China. Only the 23 million people of Taiwan have the right to decide Taiwan's future. These facts cannot be rewritten by China.

After the end of World War II, the Treaty of San Francisco was signed. As a legally binding treaty under international law, it replaced the Cairo Declaration, the Potsdam Proclamation, and other political instruments. In the mid-1980s Taiwan started a process of liberalization and democratization, culminating in the completion of its first direct presidential election in 1996. Since then, representatives of the executive and legislative branches of the ROC government have been elected by the people of Taiwan, making it the only legitimate authority to effectively govern and represent Taiwan externally. This also established the status quo of the ROC (Taiwan) and the PRC existing on an equal footing, with neither being subordinate to the other.

China has long misrepresented United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758, repeating the fallacy that it determines that Taiwan's sovereignty belongs to the PRC and using it as a pretext to suppress Taiwan's international participation, which is utterly absurd. In fact, resolution was never intended to decide Taiwan's status, let alone give the Beijing authorities the power to limit Taiwan's international participation.

In recent years, Chinese military aircraft and ships have conducted exercises in the Taiwan Strait and around neighboring countries, seriously jeopardizing regional peace and stability. Yet, at the abovementioned press conference, Minister Wang attempted to shift the blame for recent cross-strait tensions onto Taiwan, ignoring China's constant military provocations. China's actions blatantly violate the principle of refraining from the threat or use of force set out in the UN Charter and have seriously disrupted global shipping, flights, and trade links. China is a troublemaker in the international community and a saboteur of peace across the Taiwan Strait.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs calls on the Beijing authorities to respect the objective reality of the existence of the ROC (Taiwan), jointly uphold regional peace and stability, stop misleading the international community, and immediately cease its repeated and unwarranted provocations. Cross-strait relations will only be improved when China adopts a responsible attitude and engages in reasonable, rational, respectful, and equitable dialogue with the democratically elected government of Taiwan.

MOFA urges the international community to continue to support democratic Taiwan through concrete actions, jointly condemn China's repeated attempts to unilaterally change the status quo through coercion and force, and denounce its intimidation and harassment of other countries. Taiwan, in unity with its democratic partners, will jointly uphold the democratic umbrella to collectively counter authoritarian aggression, defend universal values and the rules-based international order, and work together to maintain peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and security throughout the Indo-Pacific region. (E)

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