03/21/2026 | Press release | Archived content
No. 109
March 21, 2026
US Ambassador to the United Nations Michael Waltz appeared before the Subcommittee on National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs of the House Committee on Appropriations on March 20 to testify during a field hearing on accountability and reform at the United Nations (UN) held at the US Mission to the UN in New York.
During the hearing, John Moolenaar (R-MI), Chairman of the House Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party, asked Ambassador Waltz about how the United States was working with allies and partners to maintain transparency and the integrity of UN institutions and address the issue of these organizations being leveraged by countries such as China and Russia for their own geopolitical agendas. In response, Ambassador Waltz stated that continual support of Taiwan's meaningful participation in international organizations was a key part of the charge of the US Mission to the UN.
Ambassador Waltz also stressed that Taiwan's expertise and resources, particularly in technology, were of substantive benefit to the world in addressing some of the world's most critical challenges and that the United States would not advocate for partners that do not share the same view on the value of freedom. He further pointed out that, for example, the United States opposed China's intentional misuse and mischaracterization of United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) Resolution 2758, which was part of China's broader efforts to isolate Taiwan from the international community, adding that the United States had forcefully pushed back against China's attempts and that he hoped this would be effective.
Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung sincerely thanks Ambassador Waltz for publicly restating US support for Taiwan's international participation and opposing China's attempts to keep Taiwan out through its mischaracterization of UNGA Resolution 2758. He points out that staunch US support for Taiwan demonstrates that Taiwan is a responsible, capable, and key partner of the world's nations and that the international community cannot condone political distortions by any country aimed at the exclusion of a democratic partner capable of contributing to the world.
The United States, he continued, is firmly committed to maintaining Taiwan's right to connect with the world, which further showcases Taiwan's expertise in health care, disease prevention, digital technology, and supply chain resilience, and the importance of maintaining Taiwan's ability to use its experiences for the betterment of the international community. Only by allowing Taiwan to truly engage with the world can the world benefit from Taiwan. This is the consensus and sincere desire of many democratic countries.
Minister Lin once again reiterates that UNGA Resolution 2758 addresses China's representation in the UN, not Taiwan's sovereignty. The resolution makes no mention of Taiwan. Therefore, no country can cite the resolution as a reason for precluding Taiwan's participation in the UN system or other international organizations.
The Republic of China (Taiwan) is an independent and sovereign country. Taiwan's sovereignty belongs to the people of Taiwan. The People's Republic of China has never governed Taiwan, and the international community overwhelmingly recognizes that neither side is subordinate to the other. These objective facts reflect the status quo, and Taiwanese society has a strong common understanding of these issues. Only Taiwan's democratically elected government can represent the 23 million people of Taiwan in the UN system and in multilateral mechanisms.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs urges the international community to continue taking concrete action to oppose China's misrepresentation of UNGA Resolution 2758 and the inappropriate linkage between this misrepresentation and the "one China principle." The international community should collectively refute China's attempts to claim that the Taiwan issue is an internal matter so as to prevent China from establishing a so-called legal basis for a possible future armed invasion of Taiwan. As a force for good, Taiwan will continue to work for its international participation, contribute to the international community, and jointly safeguard peace, stability, and prosperity across the Taiwan Strait and in the Indo-Pacific region. (E)