Lessons for Taiwan: US capabilities are needed now to defeat intelligence failure
Hamas’s surprise war against Israel is horrific and a stark warning for the United States’ interests in the Indo-Pacific and for Taiwan. The nature of Israel’s and the United States’ intelligence failure—how could they fail to receive or, if received, to heed warnings of the attack—will be a source of heated debate for decades to come. Previous strategic surprise against the U.S., including Pearl Harbor, Tet, the end of the Cold War, the rise of the PRC, and 9/11, remain topics of contention, but provide a valuable study for the causes of these undeniable intelligence failures. Fundamentally, there are many reasons why the U.S. intelligence community can fail. But surprise—the inability to anticipate the attack, which is often rooted in a failure of imagination and errors in assumptions—tops the list.
The costs of intelligence failures are always considerable for the American people, U.S. interests, allies, and partners. The danger that there will be an intelligence failure regarding the People’s Republic of China’s (PRC) invasion of Taiwan is particularly acute. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) will attempt to do everything it can to maximize surprise by playing to existing U.S. assumptions, expectations, and failure of imagination. The likelihood of the PRC’s successful surprise is rooted in them and, as such, should compel U.S. national security officials to expect that an invasion started by the PRC will be broader than anticipated, likely to include attacks against U.S. allies, Japan, and the Philippines, as well as Guam and even the U.S. homeland. It is probable that the invasion will also be escalatory not only horizontally, that is, including more countries than Taiwan, but also vertically, involving more intensive combat and employment of chemical weapons attacks or limited nuclear strikes—in essence a war of existential proportion.
In 1941, Japanese attacks against the British in Malaya and Singapore and the U.S. in the Philippines were necessary to secure Japan’s flanks to the strategic objective of oil in the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia). Additional attacks against U.S. targets in Guam, Wake, and Pearl Harbor were the attempt to shock the American public and military and compel them to recognize the high cost of recapturing Japan’s conquests, which soon also included most of the Solomons, and the Marshalls and Gilberts. Japan presumed U.S. forces would be deterred from the high costs of recapturing Japan’s outer defense perimeter and so recognize the conquests as a fait accompli. So Imperial Japanese leaders had hoped. They could not imagine that after months of spectacular success their fleet would be checked at Coral Sea and soundly defeated at Midway.
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