Tsai Ing-wen's government called it "silicon shield." Critics called it a single point of failure. Both descriptions captured something true about Taiwan's position as the manufacturer of approximately 92 percent of the world's most advanced logic chips — but neither captured the degree to which subsequent administrations have converted that position from passive vulnerability into active leverage.
The TSMC international expansion strategy, accelerated after 2022, has placed advanced fabrication facilities in Arizona, Germany, and Japan — with a second Arizona fab, a Kyushu expansion, and a proposed facility in Poland all in planning or early construction phases. Each agreement has been negotiated with an explicit quid pro quo structure that goes beyond the public-facing semiconductor subsidy packages.
Diplomatic sources in Brussels, Washington, and Tokyo confirm that TSMC location negotiations include classified annexes covering intelligence sharing commitments, allied defence response protocols in the event of Chinese military action against Taiwan, and in some cases pre-positioning of allied military assets. The German agreement, the most commercially straightforward, is an exception: Berlin declined to formalise security annexes, a decision that has complicated ongoing negotiations over a potential second German facility.
The strategy's logic is simple: a government that has accepted TSMC investment, and whose domestic semiconductor supply now flows through a Taiwanese-designed facility, has a material interest in Taiwan's continued autonomous operation that transcends abstract alliance commitments. The chip factory is a security guarantee in concrete form.
"We make things the world cannot do without," said one senior official in the Presidential Office, speaking without attribution. "We have decided to make that explicit."