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Bill

Bill

S 3208

Six Assurances to Taiwan Act

119th Congress Introduced by John Curtis and 2 co-sponsors

Bill codifies Six Assurances to Taiwan into law with congressional oversight to legally protect Taiwan from coercion, potentially escalating U.S.-China tensions.

Introduced in Senate
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · S 3208

Legislative bill overview

S 3208 seeks to formally codify the "Six Assurances"—diplomatic commitments the U.S. made to Taiwan regarding military support and political recognition—into binding congressional language. The bill would establish congressional review mechanisms for these assurances and create legal frameworks to protect Taiwan from coercion by external actors, particularly China.

Why is this important

Taiwan's international status remains one of the most sensitive geopolitical issues globally. By codifying these assurances into law rather than leaving them as informal diplomatic understandings, the U.S. would create enforceable commitments with potential implications for U.S.-China relations. This affects defense partnerships, regional stability in the Indo-Pacific, and how the U.S. balances its "One China" policy with Taiwan's de facto autonomy.

Potential points of contention

  • U.S.-China relations: China views enhanced Taiwan protections as interference in internal affairs and violation of the Three Communiqués; codification could escalate diplomatic tensions
  • Legal enforceability ambiguity: Congressional review mechanisms may create conflicts with executive branch flexibility in diplomacy and defense commitments
  • Scope of "coercion": Defining what constitutes actionable coercion and appropriate U.S. responses could lead to automatic involvement in cross-strait disputes

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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