Taiwan is one of the hardest places on Earth to invade. Its mountains, the seas that surround it, and its few usable landing beaches have defeated the plans of great powers before. But according to a Taiwanese security scholar, the island’s gravest danger is not the one that would arrive by sea—it is the quieter campaign already under way to wear down the public’s will to resist until the threat no longer feels real.
Kuo Yu-jen, vice president of the Institute for National Policy Research, Taiwan’s oldest private think tank, on July 4 delivered that assessment at a recent forum hosted by the Taiwan Inspiration Association.
The Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) cognitive warfare—its campaign to shape opinion and sap morale—is more dangerous than any warplane or warship, he said, because it erodes trust, breeds helplessness, and gradually numbs Taiwanese people to the danger they face.
Geography alone makes Taiwan a forbidding target, Kuo said. The terrain is rugged, few beaches can support an amphibious landing, and an attacker must first cross roughly 100 miles of open water.
A CCP invasion force today would face the same punishing arithmetic, Kuo said.
Nor would a war over Taiwan stay local. The island anchors the first island chain—the arc running from Japan through Taiwan and the Philippines toward Southeast Asia—and sits astride major shipping lanes and undersea data cables.
A war over Taiwan, Kuo said, would inevitably spill into Japan and the Philippines and draw in the United States.
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has drawn the same conclusion for his country, Kuo noted.
‘The Anaconda Strategy’
Because a head-on invasion is so costly, Kuo said, Beijing has chosen to squeeze Taiwan rather than storm it—a multilayered “anaconda strategy,” as Taiwan’s navy commander has called it, built on military drills, aircraft carrier patrols, coast guard “law enforcement” in the gray zone just below the threshold of war, and rehearsals for sea and air blockades.The goal, Kuo said, is to turn the strait into a closed battlefield—and, by dominating the Taiwan Strait along with the East and South China Seas, to keep American forces from reaching the fight.
Taiwan has adjusted accordingly. With no ambition to retake mainland China, Kuo said, its military has stopped trying to match Beijing plane for plane. It focuses instead on keeping an invader at arm’s length with cheap, mobile, hard-to-target, “asymmetric” weapons—anti-ship missiles, air defenses, and U.S.-made HIMARS rocket launchers—that make any landing prohibitively expensive.
‘Taiwan’s Real Crisis’
Yet for all the hardware, Kuo kept returning to what he called Taiwan’s real crisis, and it lies within: CCP infiltration that deepens political division, hidden agents, and a public not alert enough to the threat. The problem is not hypothetical.Still, the threat Kuo stressed most is aimed at minds, not infrastructure. Cognitive warfare outranks the warplanes and ships circling the island, he said, because it works on people—corroding trust, spreading futility, and dulling vigilance until the danger stops feeling real.
His prescription is psychological resilience: civil defense groups trained under realistic conditions, backups for critical infrastructure, alternative communication networks for a crisis, and leaders who stay visible and speak steadily when disinformation surges.
In the end, Kuo said, everything turns on a single question—whether the Taiwanese people keep the will to resist at all.







