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It may simply be a question of timing, media attention, and the direct involvement of the #2 person in the line of POTUS succession, but the arrival today of a House Speaker Pelosi-led U.S. delegation in Taiwan is stirring global controversy and geopolitical tensions. The reality is there are always regular and frequent visits by U.S. officials to Taiwan in what is an open, transparent, and healthy regional alliance between the U.S. and the island country (home to the semiconductor manufacturing behemoth Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited [TSMC]).
But perception and the media cycle do matter in our current information ecosystem. We thought the best version of OODA Loop ‘coverage’ of the trip by Pelosi et. al. is to return to our Fall 2021 Stratigame. The objective here is a “cheat sheet” of questions the OODA Loop readership should bring to bear in their analysis of the impact of the visit – a list of alternative, more sophisticated framing of the issues at hand. Our analysis is neither prescriptive nor predictive but offers a framing of the issues which achieves better and more informed questions and insights about the impact of this geopolitical maelstrom.
In our Results of an OODA Stratigame: Scenario Planning for Global Computer Chip Supply Chain Disruption, the future of Taiwan was fully integrated into the scenario narrative. Potential futures included:
A seminal industry study identified the market forces, crises, and incentives that outsourced chip manufacturing in the first place (in the 1980s) during the period of Japanese competitive advantage and again in other parts of Asia in the 2000s (in hindsight, the shift to Taiwanese foundries has clearly proven radical and highly impactful). In each period, foreign countries were willing to subsidize the cost of new fabs, allowing for indigenous companies to grab market share.
Questions remain about these futures:
Even with this legislation and subsequent subsidy stateside, “Intel’s fabs will take ~2 years to build, and experts believe it will take 3-5 years to gauge whether the strategy will work.” Taiwan-based TSMC is an outlier, and its margins are boosted by government subsidies that are much higher than the US’s. Experts are still optimistic: The US needs computer chips, and global supply chain issues are proving it pays to have them domestically.” (1)
During the OODA Stratigame, we were also sensitive to the “workplace hazard” of too China/Taiwan-centric a Stratigame, reminding participants that too strong a political narrative about the “China Threat” would take too many strategic resources away from other threat vectors. As a result, we gamed out a scenario in which:
The reality is that the timing and signaling of the U.S. delegation’s visit to Taiwan are actually in response to the severity of Putin’s recent actions in Ukraine. It seems the current American leadership has concluded that the highest level of engagement is required to avoid the mistakes of the past relative to the Russian threat to Ukraine and Beijing using the Putin template sooner rather than later in a tactical decision to attempt to annex Taiwan. Some have always considered it a “not if, but when” proposition. Scenario planning is not concerned with nailing down a prediction on the date for such activity by China but is more concerned with articulating a narrative that captures the potential precursor conditions for Beijing to act.
The overarching strategy question here is: How do formative answers to these questions feed back into your organization’s foresight strategy, scenario planning, wargaming, strategic planning, risk awareness, and decision-making?
Here are the questions we are asking to sort through the sometimes reductive mainstream news outlet coverage and to inform our tracking of more sophisticated feedback loops from the event:
It should go without saying that tracking threats are critical to inform your actions. This includes reading our OODA Daily Pulse, which will give you insights into the nature of the threat and risks to business operations.
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