The definition of a linear algebraic complex reductive group is sometimes using the connectedness hypothesis for the complex algebraic group sometimes not.
Here I use the following definition : a complex affine linear algebraic group $G$ is said to be reductive if the connected component of the identity of its unipotent radical is trivial. I am aware that the linear hypothesis is somewhat redundant.
Is the well known following theorem still true without any connectedness hypothesis (for the complex algebraic groups or the real compact ones, since being connected or irreducible is the same for the algebraic group)?
There is an equivalence of categories between the category of smooth representations of a compact real Lie group and and the category of algebraic representations of a complex linear algebraic reductive groups.
Or the following theorem?
A linear complex algebraic group is reductive if and only if it has an algebraic compact real form, which is then a maximal compact real Lie group
Or the following one?
The complexification of a compact real Lie group is a reductive linear algebraic group
The only place I found these theorems without any hypothesis on the connectedness is in Lie Groups and Algebraic Groups by Onishchik & Vinberg, but their definition of reductiveness is based on the reductiveness of the Lie algebra, which does not seem clearly to exclude the case of the $(\mathbb{C}, +)$ group.
I would also like if the hypothesis is necessary a counter-example and if not a good reference.
Edit Reposted from MathSE https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/4963922/is-connectedness-necessary-for-a-reductive-group-to-be-the-complexification-of-a
Edit Actually in the book Representations of Compact Lie Groups of Tammo tom Dieck and Theodor Bröcker, a clear proof of the last theorem mentioned above is given without any hypothesis of connectivity, in cap. III.8.