Charles Lyons Jones
The harder lesson from Iran may be what comes after a decapitation strike.
U.S.-led military operations against Iran – which began with a decapitation strike that killed the regime’s most senior leadership figures including Ayatollah Khamenei – will have far-reaching implications beyond the Middle East. For China, the U.S.-led campaign may prove a valuable lesson in how to disrupt continuity of government and the military chain-of-command during an invasion of Taiwan. But it may yet become a cautionary tale of what can go wrong after a successful decapitation strike.
The lessons for China’s military are clear. U.S. and Israeli forces were able to glean exquisite, time-sensitive and operationally relevant intelligence, which likely required a deft integration of signals intelligence, geospatial capabilities and well-placed human sources inside the orbit of Iran’s most senior leadership. Quick, streamlined processes for the collection, processing and assessment of intelligence, combined with seamless joint operations between U.S. and Israeli forces, likely proved critical to the success of recent decapitation strikes in Iran. Such capabilities will matter for any military operation against Taiwan.