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War game suggests Chinese invasion of Taiwan would fail at a huge cost to US, Chinese and Taiwanese militaries

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(CNN)A Chinese invasion of Taiwan in 2026 would result in thousands of casualties among Chinese, United States, Taiwanese and Japanese forces, and it would be unlikely to result in a victory for Beijing, according to a prominent independent Washington think tank, which conducted war game simulations of a possible conflict that is preoccupying military and political leaders in Asia and Washington.

A war over Taiwan could leave a victorious US military in as crippled a state as the Chinese forces it defeated.

At the end of the conflict, at least two US aircraft carriers would lie at the bottom of the Pacific and China's modern navy, which is the largest in the world, would be in "shambles."

Those are among the conclusions the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), made after running what it claims is one of the most extensive war-game simulations ever conducted on a possible conflict over Taiwan, the democratically ruled island of 24 million that the Chinese Communist Party claims as part of its sovereign territory despite never having controlled it.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping has refused to rule out the use of military force to bring the island under Beijing's control.

CNN reviewed an advance copy of the report -- titled "The First Battle of the Next War" -- on the two dozen war scenarios run by CSIS, which said the project was necessary because previous government and private war simulations have been too narrow or too opaque to give the public and policymakers a true look at how conflict across the Taiwan Strait might play out.

"There's no unclassified war game out there looking at the US-China conflict," said Mark Cancian, one of the three project leaders and a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "Of the games that are unclassified, they're usually only done once or twice."

CSIS ran this war game 24 times to answer two fundamental questions: would the invasion succeed and at what cost?

The likely answers to those two questions are no and enormous, the CSIS report said.

"The United States and Japan lose dozens of ships, hundreds of aircraft, and thousands of service members. Such losses would damage the US global position for many years," the report said. In most scenarios, the US Navy lost two aircraft carriers and 10 to 20 large surface combatants. Approximately 3,200 US troops would be killed in three weeks of combat, nearly half of what the US lost in two decades of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"China also suffers heavily. Its navy is in shambles, the core of its amphibious forces is broken, and tens of thousands of soldiers are prisoners of war," it said. The report estimated China would suffer about 10,000 troops killed and lose 155 combat aircraft and 138 major ships.

Taiwan would be devastated​



The scenarios paint a bleak future for Taiwan, even if a Chinese invasion doesn't succeed.

"While Taiwan's military is unbroken, it is severely degraded and left to defend a damaged economy on an island without electricity and basic services," the report. The island's army would suffer about 3,500 casualties, and all 26 destroyers and frigates in its navy will be sunk, the report said.

Japan is likely to lose more than 100 combat aircraft and 26 warships while US military bases on its home territory come under Chinese attack, the report found.

But CSIS said it did not want its report to imply a war over Taiwan "is inevitable or even probable."

"The Chinese leadership might adopt a strategy of diplomatic isolation, gray zone pressure, or economic coercion against Taiwan," it said.

Dan Grazier, a senior defense policy fellow at the Project on Government Oversight (POGO), sees an outright Chinese invasion of Taiwan as extremely unlikely. Such a military operation would immediately disrupt the imports and exports upon which the Chinese economy relies for its very survival, Grazier told CNN, and interrupting this trade risks the collapse of the Chinese economy in short order. China relies on imports of food and fuel to drive their economic engine, Grazier said, and they have little room to maneuver.

"The Chinese are going to do everything they can in my estimation to avoid a military conflict with anybody," Grazier said. To challenge the United States for global dominance, they'll use industrial and economic power instead of military force.

But Pentagon leaders have labeled China as America's "pacing threat," and last year's China Military Power report mandated by Congress said "the PLA increased provocative and destabilizing actions in and around the Taiwan Strait, to include increased flights into Taiwan's claimed air defense identification zone and conducting exercises focused on the potential seizure of one of Taiwan's outlying islands."

In August, the visit of then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to the island prompted a wide-ranging display of PLA military might, which included sending missiles over the island as well as into the waters of Japan's exclusive economic zone.


China increasing military pressure​

Since then, Beijing has stepped up aggressive military pressure tactics on the island, sending fighter jets across the median line of the Taiwan Strait, the body of water separating Taiwan and China and into the island's air defense identification zone -- a buffer of airspace commonly referred to as an ADIZ.

And speaking about Taiwan at the 20th Chinese Communist Party Congress in October, Chinese leader Xi Jinping won large applause when he said China would "strive for peaceful reunification" — but then gave a grim warning, saying "we will never promise to renounce the use of force and we reserve the option of taking all measures necessary."

The Biden administration has been steadfast in its support for the island as provided by the Taiwan Relations Act, which said Washington will provide the island with the means to defend itself without committing US troops to that defense.

The recently signed National Defense Authorization Act commits the US to a program to modernize Taiwan's military and provides for $10 billion of security assistance over five years, a strong sign of long-term bipartisan support for the island.

Biden, however, has said more than once that US military personnel would defend Taiwan if the Chinese military were to launch an invasion, even as the Pentagon has insisted there is no change in Washington's "One China" policy.

Under the "One China" policy, the US acknowledges China's position that Taiwan is part of China, but has never officially recognized Beijing's claim to the self-governing island.

"Wars happen even when objective analysis might indicate that the attacker might not be successful," said Cancian.

The CSIS report said for US troops to prevent China from ultimately taking control of Taiwan, there were four constants that emerged among the 24 war game iterations it ran:

Taiwan's ground forces must be able to contain Chinese beachheads; the US must be able to use its bases in Japan for combat operations; the US must have long-range anti-ship missiles to hit the PLA Navy from afar and "en masse"; and the US needs to fully arm Taiwan before shooting starts and jump into any conflict with its own forces immediately.


No 'Ukraine model' for Taiwan​

"There is no 'Ukraine model' for Taiwan," the report said, referring to how US and Western aid slowly trickled in to Ukraine well after Russia's invasion of its neighbor started and no US or NATO troops are actively fighting against Russia.

"Once the war begins, it's impossible to get any troops or supplies onto Taiwan, so it's a very different situation from Ukraine where the United States and its allies have been able to send supplies continuously to Ukraine," said Cancian. "Whatever the Taiwanese are going to fight the war with, they have to have that when the war begins."

Washington will need to begin acting soon if it's to meet some of the CSIS recommendations for success in a Taiwan conflict, the think tank said.

Those include, fortifying US bases in Japan and Guam against Chinese missile attacks; moving its naval forces to smaller and more survivable ships; prioritizing submarines; prioritizing sustainable bomber forces over fighter forces; but producing more cheaper fighters; and pushing Taiwan toward a similar strategy, arming itself with more simple weapons platforms rather than expensive ships that are unlikely to survive a Chinese first strike.

Those policies would make winning less costly for the US military, but the toll would still be high, the CSIS report said.

"The United States might win a pyrrhic victory, suffering more in the long run than the 'defeated' Chinese."

"Victory is not everything," the report said.

 
. .
Until 2022 June, all the war games hold by Pentagon on war with China over Taiwan had the Murican losing miserably. Except 1 game. Murica giving themselves weapon systems still in the imagination of Murica. And simultaneously downgrading all the Chinese capability.

And suddenly this latest revelation from think tank beholden to Pentagon and Geriatic Joe. that Murica will win!

I wonder the war games Murica played in 1950. When Dugout Doug declared Muricans be home by Christmas

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...korean-war-memorial-on-a-warm-summer-evening/
Finally they got someone to come foward and claim " we can win".
 
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Any reason why Taiwan does not have its own nuclear deterrent? It is not like they don't have resources or know how. (They have power nuclear reactors). If they get nukes, war, at least the full-blown kind that was described, will become obsolete, and we don't have to read these simulations.
 
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Any reason why Taiwan does not have its own nuclear deterrent? It is not like they don't have resources or know how. (They have power nuclear reactors). If they get nukes, war, at least the full-blown kind that was described, will become obsolete, and we don't have to read these simulations.

taiwan is crawling with mainland spies.
the second a serious nuclear program is started(and nowhere near finished), the war begins.
 
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Until 2022 June, all the war games hold by Pentagon on war with China over Taiwan had the Murican losing miserably. Except 1 game. Murica giving themselves weapon systems still in the imagination of Murica. And simultaneously downgrading all the Chinese capability.

And suddenly this latest revelation from think tank beholden to Pentagon and Geriatic Joe. that Murica will win!

I wonder the war games Murica played in 1950. When Dugout Doug declared Muricans be home by Christmas



https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...korean-war-memorial-on-a-warm-summer-evening/

most serious and realistic war games are not published. those that are is pretty much just propaganda. either for more military funds or to sounds strong.

the cnn report doesn't even make sense. in what world does a all out chinese reunification war see RoC only suffer only 3600 military dead if they dont just surrender right away???
the chinese rocket force could kill more in the first hour than that.

i would have to read more on the premise of the scenarios, but i suspect its full of nonsense with things like, china bee-lining for naval invasion immediately, which makes no sense, and random arbitrary limitations for china, like only one fleet engages and the other just do...nothing, while assuming us basing is pretty much secure because they use the absolutely lowest/worse assumptions about the performance of chinese weapons while using the highest/best assumption about their own abilities to do things like repair and interceptions and such.
 
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Why would Japan jump in between China takeover of Taiwan?

Unless USN is plan on hitting industrial zones in China, China will pump military hardware faster than it’s will take US to ship supplies across Pacific Ocean. Which mean no matter the technological advantage, or percentage of US naval presence, Taiwan is indefensible.

TBH, I even doubt US will risk it Navy for Taiwan.
 
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Any reason why Taiwan does not have its own nuclear deterrent? It is not like they don't have resources or know how. (They have power nuclear reactors). If they get nukes, war, at least the full-blown kind that was described, will become obsolete, and we don't have to read these simulations.
China will immediately launch strike to disable Taiwan nuke bomb capabilities if they attempt one. This is the big reason why Taiwan are restricted from making one.

Why would Japan jump in between China takeover of Taiwan?

Unless USN is plan on hitting industrial zones in China, China will pump military hardware faster than it’s will take US to ship supplies across Pacific Ocean. Which mean no matter the technological advantage, or percentage of US naval presence, Taiwan is indefensible.

TBH, I even doubt US will risk it Navy for Taiwan.
Japan is a stupid fool, Follow US order blindly. Japan is still keen on leader of Asia role promised by USA. They need to wait up from reality, they are no more the leader of Asia.
 
. . .
"China also suffers heavily. Its navy is in shambles, the core of its amphibious forces is broken, and tens of thousands of soldiers are prisoners of war," it said. The report estimated China would suffer about 10,000 troops killed and lose 155 combat aircraft and 138 major ships.‘

LOL what a laughable war game. China only lost 155 combat aircraft and lost this war game?? what happen to rest of 1500 of them?
PLAF as of today.
J20- 200+
J16 - 300+
J10B/C - 400+
J11 + Su30/35 + J10A - 600 +

China is producing about 60+ J20 and 80+ J15/16 each year. By 2026. China's 4.5 and 5 generation combat aircrafts will over 1300.
PLAF will wipe out anything that moves in the sea and sky with in its 1000km range.
 
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LOL.... Chinese will be scrambled against USA and its allies.

Who will back to CHina?

Pakistan? Not at all... EU and USA will ban and economy sanction on Pakistan immediately and Pakistan will take a U-turn within a few days.

Only possible supporter I could find " North Korea"
 
.
(CNN)A Chinese invasion of Taiwan in 2026 would result in thousands of casualties among Chinese, United States, Taiwanese and Japanese forces, and it would be unlikely to result in a victory for Beijing, according to a prominent independent Washington think tank, which conducted war game simulations of a possible conflict that is preoccupying military and political leaders in Asia and Washington.

A war over Taiwan could leave a victorious US military in as crippled a state as the Chinese forces it defeated.

At the end of the conflict, at least two US aircraft carriers would lie at the bottom of the Pacific and China's modern navy, which is the largest in the world, would be in "shambles."

Those are among the conclusions the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), made after running what it claims is one of the most extensive war-game simulations ever conducted on a possible conflict over Taiwan, the democratically ruled island of 24 million that the Chinese Communist Party claims as part of its sovereign territory despite never having controlled it.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping has refused to rule out the use of military force to bring the island under Beijing's control.

CNN reviewed an advance copy of the report -- titled "The First Battle of the Next War" -- on the two dozen war scenarios run by CSIS, which said the project was necessary because previous government and private war simulations have been too narrow or too opaque to give the public and policymakers a true look at how conflict across the Taiwan Strait might play out.

"There's no unclassified war game out there looking at the US-China conflict," said Mark Cancian, one of the three project leaders and a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "Of the games that are unclassified, they're usually only done once or twice."

CSIS ran this war game 24 times to answer two fundamental questions: would the invasion succeed and at what cost?

The likely answers to those two questions are no and enormous, the CSIS report said.

"The United States and Japan lose dozens of ships, hundreds of aircraft, and thousands of service members. Such losses would damage the US global position for many years," the report said. In most scenarios, the US Navy lost two aircraft carriers and 10 to 20 large surface combatants. Approximately 3,200 US troops would be killed in three weeks of combat, nearly half of what the US lost in two decades of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"China also suffers heavily. Its navy is in shambles, the core of its amphibious forces is broken, and tens of thousands of soldiers are prisoners of war," it said. The report estimated China would suffer about 10,000 troops killed and lose 155 combat aircraft and 138 major ships.

Taiwan would be devastated​



The scenarios paint a bleak future for Taiwan, even if a Chinese invasion doesn't succeed.

"While Taiwan's military is unbroken, it is severely degraded and left to defend a damaged economy on an island without electricity and basic services," the report. The island's army would suffer about 3,500 casualties, and all 26 destroyers and frigates in its navy will be sunk, the report said.

Japan is likely to lose more than 100 combat aircraft and 26 warships while US military bases on its home territory come under Chinese attack, the report found.

But CSIS said it did not want its report to imply a war over Taiwan "is inevitable or even probable."

"The Chinese leadership might adopt a strategy of diplomatic isolation, gray zone pressure, or economic coercion against Taiwan," it said.

Dan Grazier, a senior defense policy fellow at the Project on Government Oversight (POGO), sees an outright Chinese invasion of Taiwan as extremely unlikely. Such a military operation would immediately disrupt the imports and exports upon which the Chinese economy relies for its very survival, Grazier told CNN, and interrupting this trade risks the collapse of the Chinese economy in short order. China relies on imports of food and fuel to drive their economic engine, Grazier said, and they have little room to maneuver.

"The Chinese are going to do everything they can in my estimation to avoid a military conflict with anybody," Grazier said. To challenge the United States for global dominance, they'll use industrial and economic power instead of military force.

But Pentagon leaders have labeled China as America's "pacing threat," and last year's China Military Power report mandated by Congress said "the PLA increased provocative and destabilizing actions in and around the Taiwan Strait, to include increased flights into Taiwan's claimed air defense identification zone and conducting exercises focused on the potential seizure of one of Taiwan's outlying islands."

In August, the visit of then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to the island prompted a wide-ranging display of PLA military might, which included sending missiles over the island as well as into the waters of Japan's exclusive economic zone.


China increasing military pressure​

Since then, Beijing has stepped up aggressive military pressure tactics on the island, sending fighter jets across the median line of the Taiwan Strait, the body of water separating Taiwan and China and into the island's air defense identification zone -- a buffer of airspace commonly referred to as an ADIZ.

And speaking about Taiwan at the 20th Chinese Communist Party Congress in October, Chinese leader Xi Jinping won large applause when he said China would "strive for peaceful reunification" — but then gave a grim warning, saying "we will never promise to renounce the use of force and we reserve the option of taking all measures necessary."

The Biden administration has been steadfast in its support for the island as provided by the Taiwan Relations Act, which said Washington will provide the island with the means to defend itself without committing US troops to that defense.

The recently signed National Defense Authorization Act commits the US to a program to modernize Taiwan's military and provides for $10 billion of security assistance over five years, a strong sign of long-term bipartisan support for the island.

Biden, however, has said more than once that US military personnel would defend Taiwan if the Chinese military were to launch an invasion, even as the Pentagon has insisted there is no change in Washington's "One China" policy.

Under the "One China" policy, the US acknowledges China's position that Taiwan is part of China, but has never officially recognized Beijing's claim to the self-governing island.

"Wars happen even when objective analysis might indicate that the attacker might not be successful," said Cancian.

The CSIS report said for US troops to prevent China from ultimately taking control of Taiwan, there were four constants that emerged among the 24 war game iterations it ran:

Taiwan's ground forces must be able to contain Chinese beachheads; the US must be able to use its bases in Japan for combat operations; the US must have long-range anti-ship missiles to hit the PLA Navy from afar and "en masse"; and the US needs to fully arm Taiwan before shooting starts and jump into any conflict with its own forces immediately.


No 'Ukraine model' for Taiwan​

"There is no 'Ukraine model' for Taiwan," the report said, referring to how US and Western aid slowly trickled in to Ukraine well after Russia's invasion of its neighbor started and no US or NATO troops are actively fighting against Russia.

"Once the war begins, it's impossible to get any troops or supplies onto Taiwan, so it's a very different situation from Ukraine where the United States and its allies have been able to send supplies continuously to Ukraine," said Cancian. "Whatever the Taiwanese are going to fight the war with, they have to have that when the war begins."

Washington will need to begin acting soon if it's to meet some of the CSIS recommendations for success in a Taiwan conflict, the think tank said.

Those include, fortifying US bases in Japan and Guam against Chinese missile attacks; moving its naval forces to smaller and more survivable ships; prioritizing submarines; prioritizing sustainable bomber forces over fighter forces; but producing more cheaper fighters; and pushing Taiwan toward a similar strategy, arming itself with more simple weapons platforms rather than expensive ships that are unlikely to survive a Chinese first strike.

Those policies would make winning less costly for the US military, but the toll would still be high, the CSIS report said.

"The United States might win a pyrrhic victory, suffering more in the long run than the 'defeated' Chinese."

"Victory is not everything," the report said.


This scenario seems only involve PLAAN vs USN; in the real war US will face PLAAN + PLAAF + DF21 & DF26.
 
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I guess the USAF, JPN, SKR, and Australia will sit out. :rolleyes:

USAF can only operate from bases in SK, Guam, and Okinawa.
Once DF-26 ruin all the bases USAF has no more base to operate F-22/F-35 against PLAAF.
 
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