The Korea Times
The survival of Iran’s political and military apparatus following a massive U.S.-Israeli decapitation strike has ignited a strategic debate in Taiwan, with experts weighing the island’s ability to withstand a similar “surgical” opening to an attack from the mainland. Military analysts and officials in Taipei are closely studying the February 28 strikes that killed Ali Khamenei, the Iranian supreme leader, and Iran’s ability to sustain organised resistance in the weeks that have followed. Iran’s capacity to absorb the severe blow of the loss of its top leadership has provided a real-world test of “distributed command” — a doctrine Taiwan has been racing to adopt as part of its strategy against the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). “The lesson from Tehran is that decapitation is not the end of the war but the beginning of a much more chaotic one,” said Max Lo, executive director of the Taiwan International Strategic Study Society. Lo pointed out that an article published in November by a PLA Navy-affiliated journal outlined how precision strikes on Taipei’s “nerve
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