When Taiwan Tests Malaysia’s Strategic Balance
For Malaysia, China is neither an abstract great power nor a distant geopolitical concept. It is the country’s largest trading partner, a major investor, and an unavoidable presence in regional security calculations. Yet when it comes to Taiwan, China also represents a strategic adversary not in the sense of inevitable hostility, but as a power whose actions could undermine the regional order on which Malaysia’s security and prosperity depend. This tension defines one of the most delicate challenges in Malaysia’s foreign policy today. From Kuala Lumpur’s perspective, the Taiwan issue has traditionally been managed through distance and ambiguity. Malaysia adheres to a one-China policy, avoids commentary on sovereignty questions, and prioritises ASEAN cohesion over bilateral confrontation. This approach was viable when cross-Strait tensions were relatively contained and military force remained a distant possibility. That era is ending. China’s increasingly assertive posture toward ...