The WTO’s National Security Exception and Its Implication to the China-EU Dispute: With Special References to Lithuania’s Taiwan Representative Office

Authors

  • Ke Li University of Macau E32-2035, Faculty of Law, University of Macau, Avenida da Universidade, Taipa, Macao SAR, PRC. Author

Keywords:

WTO, National Security Exception, One-China Principle, Unilateral Sanction, Taiwan Representative Office

Abstract

In the multilateral trading systems under the WTO, the national security exception plays a crucial role in balancing trade liberalisation against the security interest of a sovereign nation. The proper use of the national security exception is of particular importance in the disputes with mixed political, diplomatic and military elements. The EU has recently accused China of breaching WTO obligations by taking restrictive trade measures against Lithuania, thereby affecting free trade between the EU and China. This paper argues that the allegation would be frustrated by the application of the WTO’s national security exception, as the dispute is rooted in Lithuania’s breach of its commitment to the One-China principle, which is crucial to China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Outside the WTO ruling system, a unilaterally imposed international sanction would be insufficient to alleviate the dispute between China and Lithuania and would lead to a deadlock in the multilateral trading system.

Published

2024-02-20

Issue

Section

Articles

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