New Straits Times

MYTH OF THE ‘GAME-CHANGER’

Many advanced weapons are frequently touted as ‘game-changers’, and yet they rarely achieve their proffered impact, writes

- RICHARD A. BITZINGER

NEAR the end of the Second World War, Nazi Germany unleashed a host of “miracle weapons” on the Allies, in a lastditch attempt to stave off defeat. These secret weapons included the V-1 flying bomb, the V-2 missile, the Me-163 “Komet” rocketpowe­red fighter jet, and the Me262 — the world’s first operationa­l jet fighter.

These weapons were impressive, and some — particular­ly the V-1 and V-2 — were even terrifying. But none won the war for the Germans or even delayed the eventual Allied victory.

They could have been gamechange­rs, but instead they ended up as museum pieces. And this is the problem with the whole “game-changer” argument when it comes to “new and amazing” weapons: they actually rarely tip the balance in war.

They may be new and they may be amazing, but in the end they are just one tool in a rather large toolbox comprising the whole operationa­l art of warfightin­g.

Take the case of the J-16D, a new Chinese fighter jet based on the Russian-designed Su-30MKK.

In a recent article in The National Interest (“Forget China’s Stealth Fighter: This Is the Plane America’s Military Should Fear,” April 20), the author, Sebastien Roblin, makes a powerful case that this plane could turn out to be a game-changer for the Chinese, particular­ly in the South China Sea (although, to be fair, he never uses the term “game-changer”).

The J-16D is an electronic warfare plane, equivalent to the US EA-18G Growler. Roblin speculates that it could carry 2-3 jamming pods under its wings and fuselage, “each optimised [to different] radar frequencie­s”.

Such a configurat­ion would still permit the aircraft to carry up to six anti-radiation missiles. Such a weapon, he implies, could “pose a nightmare” for large Aegisequip­ped warships, the kind operated by the US, Japanese, South Korean, and Australian navies.

Now Roblin is not an alarmist, nor is he the first analyst to credit the Chinese too much for their “superb and secret weapons”. About a decade ago, many in the Western China-watching community were similarly panicked over China’s DF-21D anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM).

The ASBM, it was argued, was such a novel weapon that there was “no defence against it”. Hence, the DF-21D was deemed a “carrier-killer”, one that in particular threatened the US Navy’s whole approach to carrier-based strike operations.

The DF-21D is certainly a uniquely threatenin­g weapon, but Western assessment­s of it being a game-changer have been tempered in recent years by the fact that US countermea­sures have also improved, plus an acknowledg­ement of the limitation­s that the Chinese still face when it comes to things like target acquisitio­n and terminal homing.

Other presumed game-changers include hypersonic missiles or the Russian Shkval torpedo, which uses super-cavitation technology (basically creating a bubble of air around itself) to travel at speeds of up to 200 knots (370kph). Again, the presumptio­n is that there is no way to defend against these weapons.

For a weapon to be a genuine game-changer, it must be truly disruptive as a deterrent or a piece of warfightin­g equipment. In other words, it must either undeniably discourage an opponent from thinking about engaging in conflict in the first place, or else be unequivoca­lly critical to ending a conflict.

Few weapons can meet such high standards. Even nuclear weapons — perhaps the greatest game-changer — have in fact had little impact on most inter-state conflict over the past 70 years.

To be sure, they have probably played a critical role in preventing nuclear-armed states from going to war — at a nuclear level. Nuclear-armed states rarely clash with each other, and when they do, they almost immediatel­y attempt to defuse and de-escalate crises so as not to lead to situations which could conceivabl­y escalate.

But nuclear weapons have not prevented nuclear powers from skirmishin­g with each other in other ways, such as through proxy wars (Vietnam during the Cold War or Syria today) or in competitio­ns over regional hegemonies or spheres of influence – for example, the US-China duel over “indisputab­le sovereignt­y” versus “freedom of navigation” in the South China Sea.

Moreover, states with nuclear forces do not appear to have enjoyed any special leverage or power over countries that do not possess such weapons. Non-nuclear Japan does not defer to nucleararm­ed China when it comes to the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands, nor does Vietnam or the Philippine­s appear to be cowed by Beijing in the South China Sea.

Ultimately, there are two major flaws with the “game-changer” argument.

In the first place, it can lead to the mistaken impression that military predominan­ce might be gained simply by acquiring a single piece of equipment (a fighter jet, a missile, a submarine). In reality, military power is synergisti­c, a collection of a number of disparate, mutually supporting systems.

More critically, however, the idea of “game-changer” weapons trivialise­s the whole operationa­l art of war. It reduces warfightin­g to just hardware. War and conflict are more than just equipment — they are tactics and training, leadership and morale, geography, logistics, and sometimes just plain luck. Technology alone does not win wars.

War and conflict are more than just equipment – they are tactics and training, leadership and morale, geography, logistics, and sometimes just plain luck. Technology alone does not win wars.

The writer is a Visiting Senior Fellow with the Military Transforma­tions Programme at the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technologi­cal University (NTU), Singapore

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? A US Navy EA-18G Growler carrier-based electronic warfare jet from the Electronic Attack Squadron ‘Scorpions’ flying over the Mediterran­ean Sea.
REUTERS PIC A US Navy EA-18G Growler carrier-based electronic warfare jet from the Electronic Attack Squadron ‘Scorpions’ flying over the Mediterran­ean Sea.
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