Christopher Moede
This article examines ubiquitous technical surveillance (UTS) as the operationalized manifestation of unrestricted warfare in contemporary strategic competition, arguing that it collapses normative assumptions of access, attribution, and initiative. It contends that the renewal of irregular warfare lies in signature reduction as a counteroffensive gray zone doctrine that preserves freedom of maneuver by centering human operational judgment under pervasive surveillance conditions.
“[Unrestricted warfare] means that all means will be in readiness, that information will be omnipresent, and the battlefield will be everywhere. It means that all weapons and technology can be superimposed at will… the boundaries lying between the two worlds of war and non-war, of military and non-military, will be totally destroyed…”
— Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui, Unrestricted Warfare
These prescient words were not speculative theorizing from two senior People’s Liberation Army Air Force colonels, but rather a declaration of the operational reality of strategic competition. This reality – the very operationalized manifestation of Chinese unrestricted warfare – we call ubiquitous technical surveillance (UTS). This condition has increasingly preoccupied policymakers and practitioners. The Central Intelligence Agency and its partner label UTS an “existential threat” that is persistent, pervasive, and increasingly automated across all domains. It has collapsed the crucial boundaries between war and non-war, and our traditional assumptions of access, attribution, and operational initiative along with it.