The US President Joe Biden said the United States would come to the support of Taiwan in case China attacked it.
โYes,โ he responded when asked in a CNN town hall about defending Taiwan.
โWe have a commitment to that.โ Biden’s statement was at odds with the long-held US policy known as โstrategic ambiguity,โ where Washington helps build Taiwan’s defences but does not explicitly promise to come to the island’s help.
He made a similar pledge in August during an interview with ABC, insisting that the United States would always defend key allies, including Taiwan, despite the withdrawal from Afghanistan in the face of the victorious Taliban.
Biden said the United States made a โsacred commitmentโ to defend Nato allies in Canada and Europe and it’s the โsame with Japan, same with South Korea, same with Taiwan.โ

The White House subsequently told reporters on both occasions that US policy on Taiwan โhas not changed.โ
Military competition
At Thursday’s live town hall, Biden was also asked by an audience member whether the United States would be able to keep up with China’s rapid military development.
Biden responded with โYes.โ โDon’t worry about whether… they’re going to be more powerful,โ he said.
โChina, Russia and the rest of the world knows we have the most powerful military in the history of the world.โ But Biden expressed concern that rival countries may โengage in activities where they may make a serious mistakeโ.
He referred to his longtime relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping and repeated his position that he does not want โto start a new Cold War with China.โ
But he warned: โI just want to make China understand that we are not going to step back.โ
China has ramped up economic, diplomatic and military pressure on Taiwan ever since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen, who views Taiwan as already sovereign and not part of a โone China.โ
The military pressure has escalated in the last year with China sending waves of fighter jets and nuclear-capable bombers into Taiwan’s air defence zone.

