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Taiwan promotes chip diplomacy as allies old and new mingle at major trade show

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
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Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te and Marek Zenisek, Czech Minister for Science, Research and Innovation pose for a group photo at an event ahead of SEMICON 2025

TAIPEI (Reuters) -As leading global semiconductor companies gathered in Taipei this week for the Semicon trade show to discuss the AI boom, one area got a much more prominent role than before: Taiwan's use of its dominance of the chip industry to promote diplomatic aims.

Taiwan, home to the world's largest contract chipmaker TSMC, has long been the global industry leader, but it is diplomatically isolated owing to China's sovereignty claims that prevent most countries forging formal ties with Taipei.

Speaking at a side event on geopolitics that Taiwan's foreign ministry co-sponsored for the first time at Semicon, Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung said semiconductors and AI are "strategic resources".

"We firmly believe that only by working with Taiwan can the free world create trusted non-red supply chains," Lin added, referring to efforts to shift supply chains away from China.

Taiwan has been particularly keen to forge closer tech ties with other "like-minded" democracies, especially in central and eastern Europe where the Russian invasion of Ukraine has drawn sympathy for the threat Taiwan says it faces from China.

At a separate Semicon event attended by Taiwan President Lai Ching-te, Marek Zenisek, Czech Minister for Science, Research and Innovation said his country and Taiwan share the same values of democracy, freedom and openness.

"These values are under increasing pressure across the board. They are also the reason why our partnership is natural," said Zenisek, whose country is pitching itself as an ideal supplier for TSMC's first European factory being built across the border in Germany's Dresden.

Beyond Taiwan's traditional though informal supporters in the United States and Europe, Semicon also drew some more unlikely attendees from countries that have long since ditched Taiwan to draw closer to China.

Of the 17 country pavilions at Semicon, the most ever, Costa Rica attended for the first time. In 2007, it became the first country in Central America to switch diplomatic ties from Taiwan to China. Their delegation declined to comment when approached by Reuters.

There was also, for the first time, a delegation from Africa, a continent where China has broad diplomatic and economic influence and Taiwan very little.

The group of 10 African tech entrepreneurs from the French-African Foundation met Lin, on a trip the de facto French embassy in Taiwan helped arrange.

Joelle Itoua Owona, the CEO of AfriWell Health, a medical technology startup active in the Republic of Congo, which has not had relations with Taiwan since 1964, told Reuters that African governments wanted to diversify their partnerships.

Other countries like the United States and France get investment from both Taiwan and China, and Africa should be no different, she added.
"Taiwan is an additional friend" for Africa, Owona said.

 
No I do not I think China will attack Taiwan directly. China may try to blockade the Taiwan Strait but it will fail and only strengthen the worlds resolve to keep Taiwan independent. TSMC really is holding a lot of cards in this game. How does China shut off 90% of the leading edge semiconductors to the rest of the world and survive that political fallout?
 
No I do not I think China will attack Taiwan directly. China may try to blockade the Taiwan Strait but it will fail and only strengthen the worlds resolve to keep Taiwan independent. TSMC really is holding a lot of cards in this game. How does China shut off 90% of the leading edge semiconductors to the rest of the world and survive that political fallout?
I concur with your viewpoint as well. China is a huge net importer of food and energy commodities and to blatantly attack or blockade Taiwan would result in sanctions and almost totally shutdown of their society and economy. Though when I see most of my Taiwan friends applying for green cards and citizenship implies that they have some concerns as well.
 
No I do not I think China will attack Taiwan directly. China may try to blockade the Taiwan Strait but it will fail and only strengthen the worlds resolve to keep Taiwan independent. TSMC really is holding a lot of cards in this game. How does China shut off 90% of the leading edge semiconductors to the rest of the world and survive that political fallout?
Same way the US did to Europe with NordStream. They just bomb TSMC to smithereens and present a fait accompli.

If Chinese access to TSMC for fabrication is removed, and it uses machines they cannot maintain, with materials they cannot produce, it's worthless to them anyway.
 
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Not really. The Chinese would figure out how to get them to work. But nihilism seems to be in fashion lately.

Recovering Taiwan is part of the Chinese National Rejuvenation plan. The only question is when they will get Taiwan. Not if. Remember the PRC insisted on this with Nixon before accepting relations with the US. They don't forget about things like this.

Personally I think their deadline is not 2027 like the DoW keeps claiming but 2049. Hundred year anniversary of the founding of the PRC.
 
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You give too much credit to communists copy cats
The US also thought the Soviets couldn't replicate the V-2 missile since they got all the design team with von Braun, all plans, and missiles in the factory.
The Soviets also cloned both the B-29 and Fat Man bomb. The two most expensive US mega projects of WW2. The Rolls-Royce Nene engine the same thing happened.

The PRC are cloning the SpaceX Falcon 9 and Starship as we speak.
 
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