Taiwan invasion by China would fail, but at huge US cost, analysts’ war game finds
A Chinese invasion of Taiwan would probably fail if the
United States helped defend the island – but would come at a debilitating cost
to the American military itself, according to a US thinktank.
Military experts brought together by the Center for
Strategic and International Studies to war game the conflict said every likely
direct participant in a war – the United States, China, Taiwan and Japan –
would experience “enormous” losses.
Chinese missiles would probably destroy US airbases in Japan
and as far as Guam, and sink two US aircraft carriers and between 10 and 20
destroyers and cruisers as the invasion opened.
But the Chinese invading force itself would be destroyed
before it ever occupied any significant part of Taiwan and ultimately it would
be prevented from its goal of capturing the island’s capital Taipei, according
to most scenarios tested.
That, as well as damage incurred on mainland targets from
Taiwanese counterattacks, could destabilise Chinese Communist party rule, the
report says.
“We reached two conclusions,” said Eric Heginbotham, a
security expert at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
“First, under most circumstances, China is unlikely to
succeed in its operational objectives, or to occupy Taipei,” he said.
“Second, the cost of war would be high for all involved,
certainly to include the United States.”
The wargaming tested 24 different scenarios focused on China
attempting to seize the island by invasion in 2026. Crucial was the United
States: without America’s help, Taiwan would be conquered by the People’s
Liberation Army in three months or less.
The war game assumed the invasion would begin with an
opening bombardment by China that destroys most of Taiwan’s navy and air force
in a few hours. The Chinese navy would encircle Taiwan and begin ferrying a
landing force of thousands of PLA soldiers and their equipment across the
Taiwan Strait.
In what the war gamers called the most likely scenario,
Taiwan’s army would bog the invaders down on the coast.
“Meanwhile US submarines, bombers, and fighter/attack
aircraft, often reinforced by Japan Self-Defense Forces, rapidly cripple the
Chinese amphibious fleet,” the report said.
“China’s strikes on Japanese bases and US surface ships
cannot change the result: Taiwan remains autonomous,” it said.
Matthew Cancian of the US Naval War College said there were
crucial variables on which that success depends.
First, he said, Taiwan itself must be determined to fight
back.
Secondly, Japan must give its permission for the United
States to launch counterattacks from its bases on Japanese territory.
Without that, Cancian said, “then the US intervention would
not be enough to continue Taiwan’s autonomy.”
In such cases the human losses would be high, some 10,000 in
the first weeks of the war. The war game raised important unknowns, such as
whether the United States would risk nuclear war by attacking China directly.
It also asked if the US and Japanese public would be
prepared to accept the losses that came with defending Taiwan, saying US losses
could damage Washington’s ability to project global power for a very long time.
“The United States might win a pyrrhic victory, suffering
more in the long run than the ‘defeated’ Chinese,” the report said.
The report said both Taiwan and the US military need to
build up forces, focusing on the most survivable and effective weapons, to
create more deterrence to a Chinese invasion.
“Despite rhetoric about adopting a ‘porcupine strategy,’
Taiwan still spends most of its defense budget on expensive ships and aircraft
that China will quickly destroy,” it said.